☠️ Carbon Monoxide (CO) Poisoning

πŸ”· 1. What is Carbon Monoxide?

  • Colorless, odorless, tasteless gas
  • Produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-containing fuels (e.g., gas stoves, car exhausts, fires, generators)
  • A major cause of accidental poisoning worldwide


πŸ”· 2. Sources of Exposure

Source Type

Examples

Household

Gas heaters, stoves, poorly vented appliances

Environmental

Vehicle exhaust in closed garages

Fire-related

Smoke inhalation in burns

Occupational

Mines, furnaces, industrial plants



πŸ”· 3. Pathophysiology of CO Poisoning

Carbon monoxide is toxic via multiple mechanisms:

🩸 1. Carboxyhemoglobin Formation

  • CO has ~200–250Γ— affinity for Hb vs oxygen
  • Forms Carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) β†’ reduces Oβ‚‚ carrying capacity

β›” 2. Leftward Shift of Oxy-Hb Curve

  • Decreases oxygen unloading at tissues β†’ tissue hypoxia

🧠 3. Direct Cellular Toxicity

  • CO binds cytochrome oxidase in mitochondria β†’ impairs oxidative phosphorylation 
  • CO induces lipid peroxidation, leukocyte activation, and nitric oxide (NO) release, causing vasodilation, hypotension, and CNS damage.
  • Causes lactic acidosis, free radical injury

🧠 4. Delayed Neurotoxicity

  • Neuroinflammation, demyelination β†’ delayed encephalopathy


πŸ”· 4. Clinical Features

⏱️ Acute Presentation (dose-dependent)

COHb Level

Symptoms

<10%

Often asymptomatic

10–20%

Headache, nausea, dizziness

20–30%

Confusion, ataxia, dyspnea

30–40%

Severe headache, chest pain, vomiting

>40%

Seizures, coma, death


🧠 Key Signs

  • Cherry red skin/mucosa (rare, late finding)
  • Tachycardia, hypotension
  • Confusion, seizures, coma
  • Metabolic acidosis with raised lactate


πŸ”· 5. Diagnosis

πŸ§ͺ Arterial Blood Gas (ABG):

  • Normal PaOβ‚‚ despite hypoxia!,  cyanosis absent
  • May show metabolic acidosis (↑ lactate)

🩸 COHb Level:

  • Gold standard
  • Detected via CO-oximetry
  • Normal: <2% (nonsmokers), <10% (smokers)
  • Toxic: >10–15%

πŸ›‘ Pulse oximetry is unreliable: It overestimates SpOβ‚‚ (can’t distinguish oxy-Hb vs COHb)


πŸ”· 6. Management

🧯 A – Immediate Removal

  • Remove from source
  • Ensure patient & responder safety

πŸ’¨ B – 100% Oxygen Therapy

  • High-flow Oβ‚‚ via non-rebreather mask
  • Increases CO elimination (reduces half-life of COHb):

Mode

COHb Half-Life

Room air

4–6 hours

100% oxygen

1–1.5 hours

Hyperbaric oxygen (HBO)

~20 minutes


πŸ’Š C – Hyperbaric Oxygen (HBO) Therapy

  • Indications:
    • COHb >25% (>15% in pregnancy)
    • Loss of consciousness
    • Severe acidosis (pH <7.1)
    • Neurologic deficits, cardiac ischemia
  • Benefits:
    • Faster CO clearance
    • Prevents delayed neurological sequelae

πŸ”΄ Why HBOT in Pregnancy?

β€’ Fetal hemoglobin has higher affinity for CO, leading to fetal hypoxia.



πŸ”· 7. Investigations

Test

Findings

ABG

Metabolic acidosis, ↑ lactate

COHb (via co-oximetry)

↑ levels

ECG

ST-T changes, arrhythmias

Troponins

May be elevated

MRI Brain (if encephalopathy)

Basal ganglia changes (esp. globus pallidus)



πŸ”· 8. Complications

Immediate

Delayed

Hypoxia, cardiac arrest

Delayed neuropsych sequelae (DNS)

Myocardial ischemia

Cognitive deficits, memory loss

Arrhythmias

Parkinsonism-like syndrome

Pulmonary edema

Depression, psychosis



πŸ”· 9. Delayed Neurological Sequelae (DNS)

  • Seen in ~15–40% of survivors
  • Develops 3–21 days post exposure
  • Symptoms: memory loss, mood changes, psychosis, Parkinsonism
  • MRI Brain: demyelination, basal ganglia changes
  • Prevention: Early HBO therapy

βœ… Avoid Succinylcholine for Intubation

β€’ Risk of hyperkalemia in CO-induced muscle damage


βœ… ECG & Cardiac Monitoring

β€’ Myocardial ischemia is common (CO-induced hypoxia & vasodilation)

β€’ Check troponins in high-risk patients


βœ… Seizure Control

β€’ Benzodiazepines for seizures (avoid phenytoin due to CO-induced cardiac effects)


πŸ”· 10. Prognosis

  • Good with early recognition and treatment
  • Poor in delayed diagnosis, prolonged exposure, CNS involvement


πŸ”· 11. Prevention

  • CO detectors in homes
  • Regular maintenance of appliances
  • Educate about safe heating/cooking practices


πŸ”‘ Summary Mnemonic: β€œCO-POISON”

  • C – Carboxyhemoglobin formed
  • O – Oxygen affinity ↑, tissue delivery ↓
  • P – Pulse ox unreliable
  • O – Oxygen therapy (100% Oβ‚‚, HBO)
  • I – Investigation = COHb levels
  • S – Sequelae (neuro, cardiac)
  • O – Occupational/environmental exposure
  • N – Neurological signs: headache β†’ coma


 MCQs on Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

Q1. What is the most reliable test for diagnosing carbon monoxide poisoning?

A) Pulse oximetry

B) Serum lactate

C) Carboxyhemoglobin level

D) Arterial blood gas


βœ… Answer: C) Carboxyhemoglobin level

Q2. Which of the following is a classic MRI finding in delayed CO poisoning?

A) Diffuse white matter lesions

B) Bilateral globus pallidus lesions

C) Unilateral temporal lobe hyperintensity

D) Pontine hemorrhage


βœ… Answer: B) Bilateral globus pallidus lesions

Q3. Which of the following is the best treatment for severe carbon monoxide poisoning?

A) 100% oxygen via nasal cannula

B) Hyperbaric oxygen therapy

C) High-dose steroids

D) Alkalinization with sodium bicarbonate


βœ… Answer: B) Hyperbaric oxygen therapy