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Updated: Apr 23 2017

Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

Snapshot
  • A fatal case of CO poisoning displaying distinctive reddish-pink discolorationA 34-year-old male complains of several weeks of headaches, lightheadedness, nausea, and myalgias.  He reports that his wife and teenage children have all be experiencing similar symptoms.  The family uses a wood-burning stove for both heat and cooking.
Introduction
  • Carbon monoxide is an odorless, colorless, tasteless, initially nonirritating gas
  • Often produced in domestic or industrial settings
  • Highly toxic to human beings
  • Carbon monoxide has a higher affinity for hemoglobin than does oxygen, therefore, in carbon monoxide poisoning, oxygen is displaced from the hemoglobin molecule, leading to decreased delivery of oxygen to tissues and tissue dysfunction   
  • History involves exposure to automobile exhaust, smoke inhalation, barbecues, or old appliances in poorly ventilated locations
Presentation
  • Symptoms
    • confusion
    • headache
  • Physical exam
    • cherry-red skin
      • this is a rare finding
  • Chronic low-level exposure may cause flu-like symptoms
    • nausea
    • headache
    • myalgia
Evaluation
  • Oxygen saturation
    • usually NORMAL though actualy O2 content is LOW
      • this is because pulse oximeter reads carboxyyhemoglobin as normally saturated hemoglobin 
  • ABG and serum carboxyhemoglobin level  
    • normal carboxyhemoglobin level is <5% in nonsmokers and <10% in smokers
    • anion-gap metabolic acidosis due to the build-up of lactic acid 
  • ECG
    • check in elderly and those with history of cardiac disease due to increased risk for ischemia
Treatment
  • Conservative
    • 100% oxygen 
      • must displace carbon monoxide from hemoglobin
      • note: when a patient has smoke inhalational injuries, carbon monoxide and cyanide poisoning should be empirically treated with 100% oxygen and hydroxycobalamin plus sodium thiosulfate, respectively
    • hyperbaric oxygen
      • in patients who are pregnant, nonresponsive, or experiencing signs of CNS or cardiac ischemia
Question
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