Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Symptom The website of the Carbon Monoxide Kills Campaign, launched in 1999.

Carbon Monoxide PoisoningPlease help spread the word about the danger of Carbon Monoxide by adding this small button to your site.
It only takes a minute, simply add this code to your Website.




Get a Carbon Monoxide Detector
United Kingdom
from Envirotec UK
Global - from codetection.com


Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Symptom

Mild carbon monoxide poisoning causes headache, nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, and poor coordination. Most people who develop mild carbon monoxide poisoning recover quickly when moved into fresh air. Moderate or severe carbon monoxide poisoning causes confusion, unconsciousness, chest pain, shortness of breath, and coma. Thus, most victims are not able to move themselves and must be rescued. Severe poisoning is often fatal. Rarely, weeks after apparent recovery from severe carbon monoxide poisoning, symptoms such as memory loss, poor coordination, and uncontrollable loss of urine (which are referred to as delayed neuropsychiatric symptoms) develop.

Carbon monoxide is dangerous because a person may not recognize drowsiness as a symptom of poisoning. Consequently, someone with mild poisoning can go to sleep and continue to breathe the carbon monoxide until severe poisoning or death occurs. Some people with long-standing, mild carbon monoxide poisoning caused by furnaces or heaters may mistake their symptoms for other conditions, such as the flu or other viral infections.

Carbon monoxide poisoning is diagnosed by measuring the level of carbon monoxide in the blood.

HEALTH HAZARD INFORMATION  (From NIOSH)

Contributor's note: This stuff may be hard to read, but it is necessary to an understanding of how the medical community approaches this subject and how the U.S. government deals with complaints.

* Summary of toxicology

1. Effects on animals - (deleted for space considerations. See OSHA website. Get there via Google.)

2. Effects on Humans: Carbon monoxide is an asphyxiant in humans. Inhalation of carbon monoxide causes tissue hypoxia by preventing the blood from carrying sufficient oxygen. Carbon monoxide combines reversibly with hemoglobin to form carboxyhemoglobin. The reduction in oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood is proportional to the amount of carboxyhemoglobin formed [Gosselin 1984]. All factors that speed respiration and circulation accelerate the rate of carboxyhemoglobin formation; thus exercise, increased temperature, high altitude, and anemia increase the hazard associated with carbon monoxide exposure[Gosselin 1984]. Other conditions that increase risk are hyperthyroidism, obesity, bronchitis, asthma, preexisting heart disease, and alcoholism [NLM 1993]. In tests with human volunteers breathing 50 ppm carbon monoxide (a concentration that produces 27 percent carboxyhemoglobin after an exposure of 2 hours), there was a significant decrease in time to onset of exercise-induced angina[Gosselin 1984]. Carbon monoxide can be transported across the placental barrier, and exposure in utero constitutes a special risk to the fetus. Infants and young children are generally believed to be more susceptible to carbon monoxide than adults. The elderly are also believed to be more susceptible to carbon monoxide poisoning [Gosselin A carboxyhemoglobin level of 0.4 to 0.7 percent is normally present in the blood of adults. In cigarette smokers, the range is 4 to 20 percent, which places smokers at greater risk in exposure situations [Clayton and Clayton 1982; ACGIH 1991]. A capacity to adapt to carbon monoxide exposure has been reported in several human studies. Healthy young men exposed to carbon monoxide at a concentration of 44 ppm for a prolonged period suffered no adverse health effects [ACGIH 1986]. Men exposed to 50 ppm for several days without relief complained of headaches, but exposure to 40 ppm for 60 days was without effect [ACGIH 1986]. Workers in the Holland Tunnel working 8-hour swing shifts of 2 hours in and 2 hours out at an average carbon monoxide exposure concentration of 70 ppm had average carboxyhemoglobin levels of 5 percent, and none had levels above 10 percent [ACGIH 1991].

* Signs and symptoms of exposure

Know the symptoms of CO poisoning. At moderate levels, you or your family can get severe headaches, become dizzy, mentally confused, nauseated, or faint. You can even die if these levels persist for a long time. Low levels can cause shortness of breath, mild nausea, and mild headaches, and may have longer term effects on your health. Since many of these symptoms are similar to those of the flu, food poisoning, or other illnesses, you may not think that CO poisoning could be the cause.

Related Searches:
carbon monoxide symptom
carbon monoxide poison symptom


Family in carbon monoxide horror
A SHOCKED family and their 15-month-old baby narrowly escaped death when they were poisoned with a killer gas while on holiday.

Calling all Lawyers!
We need to get in touch with US and UK lawyers who can offer good legal advice to the public about Carbon Monoxide Poisoning.
Please contact us here if you can help us.

Quick Links
CO Wiki

What is Carbon Monoxide?

Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

Detectors

Carbon Monoxide news
CO Emissions
Indoor Air Pollution

Dr David Penney

Poisoning Symptoms
Personal Injury Claims
CO Detector Placement
Gas Safety Resources
General Safety Resources
CO Deaths | Suicide
Heart Attacks and CO

Buy CO Detectors

Hyperbaric Help Channel

Stories and Letters

Carbon Monoxide Legal Advice

NYC Carbon Monoxide Law

Carbon Monoxide & Health Links

Caravan Safety

CO in packaged meat
Site Map
Poisoning Advice
Fact Sheets: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

Dotnology Limited

Updated: 25rd April 2007

© Carbon Monoxide Kills 2007 site mapcarbon monoxidedetectors and alarms