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What is carbon monoxide?




The physical properties of carbon monoxide are:


The chemical properties of carbon monoxide are that it is:

CO is an important industrial gas widely used as a fuel
and as a reducing agent in the chemical industry.


Causes of poisoning

Ashtray

Carbon monoxide is produced when fuels are burned incompletely. This includes:

All these fuels are found in the domestic/recreational and working
environment. The risk of poisoning from properly installed, ventilated and regularly maintained appliances is extremely low.

However, we spend approximately 80% of our time in enclosed spaces like the home, vehicle, caravan, holiday accommodation, office, workshop, boat even a tent, it follows that having improperly
installed, maintained, or the incorrect operation or use of
appliances which can create unsafe levels of CO could dramatically
increase our risk of exposure.


Effects

Normally when you breathe, oxygen is absorbed from the lungs into the blood where it combines with hemoglobin to form oxyhemoglobin, which is then transported to organs, tissue and muscle. In the muscle oxygen is transferred to myoglobin to create oxymyoglobin.

However, when you inhale carbon monoxide replaces the oxygen and forms a substance called carboxyhemoglobin.

Poisoning occurs by:


Anoxia
Hemoglobin has a much greater affinity for carbon monoxide than oxygen, a ratio of about 240:1 and 25:1 for myoglobin, thus a relatively low carbon monoxide concentration can replace a large number of oxygen molecules for our bodies use.
Hypoxia

Oxygen that is absorbed cannot be released from the blood to the organs and tissues because carbon monoxide also increases the affinity of hemoglobin to oxygen.

Foetal haemoglobin has a higher affinity for CO than the mother.

The effects of carbon monoxide inhalationdepends on the length of exposure:

Acute
The signs and symptoms of acute exposure may include headache,
flushing, nausea, vertigo, weakness, irritability, unconsciousness,
and in persons with pre-existing heart disease and atherosclerosis,
chest pain and leg pain.

Chronic
Chronic exposure Is more difficult to diagnose than acute because the symptoms are more subtle, the carboxyhemoglobin levels may be only slightly elevated. It results from exposure to lower concentrations over an extended period anywhere from one week to months, maybe years. It can lead to long term and permanent health problems with
debilitating effects for the sufferer.

Case study

ukpmc.ac.uk/articlerender.cgi

Medical adviser's blogspot

http://co-info.blogspot.com/


Created by adminmb. Last Modification: Tuesday 08 of December, 2009 20:03:09 GMT by adminmb.