A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention environmental health advisory released in February 2026 documents a statistically significant association between prolonged indoor mycotoxin exposure and measurable neurological damage in adults, lending new scientific weight to symptoms long dismissed by mainstream medicine.
The advisory, drawing on data from 14 clinical studies conducted between 2018 and 2025, identifies trichothecene and ochratoxin A — mycotoxins produced by Stachybotrys chartarum and Aspergillus species — as the primary agents associated with neurological harm. Affected individuals showed measurable reductions in processing speed, working memory, and executive function on standardized neuropsychological assessments.
Dr. Patricia Wade, an environmental health contributor who reviewed the advisory, said the findings represent a turning point. 'For years, physicians told patients their symptoms were anxiety or depression. This report gives clinicians the evidence base to connect the dots between the water-damaged building and the brain fog,' she said.
The advisory notes that children and elderly adults face disproportionate risk due to developing or declining blood-brain barrier integrity. It recommends that clinicians ask patients about water damage history in their homes as a standard intake question.
Remediation, not medication, remains the only effective intervention. The CDC advises that affected individuals relocate during professional IICRC S520-compliant mold remediation and undergo follow-up neuropsychological testing 90 days after remediation is complete.


