REBEL Cast

REBEL Core Cast 114.0 – Carbon Monoxide Toxicity


Listen Later

Take Home Points:

  1. Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless, and tasteless gas that results from incomplete combustion of any carbon containing product. Exposure often occur unintentionally from indoor use of gas powered generators, camp stoves, or faulty home heaters.
  2. The symptoms of mild, acute exposure are non-specific and can be confused with a variety of other disease processes including common viral syndromes.
  3. Testing is done via co-oximetry which determines the amount of carboxyhemoglobin in the blood. Treatment is guided by supplemental oxygen which decreases the half-life of carboxyhemoglobin.
  4. Hyperbaric oxygenation should be considered in patients with severe toxicity (syncope, altered mental status, myocardial ischemia, or neurological abnormalities).
  5. REBEL Core Cast 114.0 – Carbon Monoxide Toxicity

    Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast

    Definition and Physiology

    • Carbon monoxide is absorbed via inhalation from the incomplete combustion of any carbon containing substance. Most often, exposures often occur unintentionally from indoor use of gas powered generators, camp stoves, or faulty home heaters.
    • Toxicity is mediated through multiple mechanisms. Physiologic oxygen carrying capacity is reduced as carbon monoxide binds hemoglobin with a greater affinity than oxygen. Moreover, carbon monoxide shifts the oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve to the left which reduces oxygen delivery to tissues. Lastly, carbon monoxide effects cellular oxygen use by impairing oxidative phosphorylation by binding to mitochondrial cytochromes. (Goldbaum 1976)
    • Clinical Manifestations

      • Acute, mild toxicity presents non-specifically. Given that most exposures will occur during the winter months, a common misdiagnosis is influenza or the “common cold.” Symptoms include: headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, and generalized weakness.
      • More severe toxicity will present with syncope, altered mental status, neurologic disturbance (ie. ataxia), myocardial ischemia, or cardiac arrest.
      • Carbon monoxide poisoning may lead to delayed neurologic sequalae – a constellation of dementia, psychosis, parkinsonism, amnestic syndromes, among other neurologic impairments.
      • Management

        • Carbon monoxide testing is performed via co-oximetry which determines the amount of carboxyhemoglobin present.
        • The mainstay of treatment is supplemental oxygenation. The half-life of carboxyhemoglobin drops from 5 hours on room air to 1 hour when breathing 100% oxygen at normal atmospheric pressure (via non-rebreather).
        • Hyperbaric treatment should be considered for severe toxicity. (Goldfrank’s Toxicology 2019)
          • Carboxyhemoglobin levels > 25% or >15% in pregnant patients are indications for hyperbarics, independent of signs/symptoms
          • There is evidence that hyperbaric oxygenation reduces the risk of cognitive sequelae after acute carbon monoxide poisoning. (Weaver 2002)
          • As always, call your local toxicologist or regional poison control center to help determine the need for hyperbaric therapy.
          •  

            Take Home Points:

            1. Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless, and tasteless gas that results from incomplete combustion of any carbon containing product. Exposure often occur unintentionally from indoor use of gas powered generators, camp stoves, or faulty home heaters.
            2. The symptoms of mild, acute exposure are non-specific and can be confused with a variety of other disease processes including common viral syndromes.
            3. Testing is done via co-oximetry which determines the amount of carboxyhemoglobin in the blood. Treatment is guided by supplemental oxygen which decreases the half-life of carboxyhemoglobin.
            4. Hyperbaric oxygenation should be considered in patients with severe toxicity (syncope, altered mental status, myocardial ischemia, or neurological abnormalities).
            5. References

              1. Goldbaum LR, Orellano T, Dergal E. Mechanism of the toxic action of carbon monoxide. Ann Clin Lab Sci. 1976 Jul-Aug;6(4):372-6. PMID: 962299.
              2. Tomaszewski C. Chapter 122. Carbon Monoxide. In: Nelson LS, Howland MA, Lewin NA, Smith SW, Goldfrank LR, Hoffman RS, , Flomenbaum NE. eds. Goldfrank’s Toxicologic Emergencies, 11e New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2019. Accessed November 6, 2023.
              3. Weaver LK, Hopkins RO, Chan KJ, Churchill S, Elliott CG, Clemmer TP, Orme JF Jr, Thomas FO, Morris AH. Hyperbaric oxygen for acute carbon monoxide poisoning. N Engl J Med. 2002 Oct 3;347(14):1057-67. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa013121. PMID: 12362006.
              4. Post Created By: Sanjay Mohan MD

                Post Peer Reviewed By: Salim Rezaie MD (Twitter @SRRezaie)

                The post REBEL Core Cast 114.0 – Carbon Monoxide Toxicity appeared first on REBEL EM - Emergency Medicine Blog.

                ...more
                View all episodesView all episodes
                Download on the App Store

                REBEL CastBy Salim R. Rezaie, MD

                • 4.8
                • 4.8
                • 4.8
                • 4.8
                • 4.8

                4.8

                160 ratings


                More shows like REBEL Cast

                View all
                EMCrit FOAM Feed by Scott D. Weingart, MD FCCM

                EMCrit FOAM Feed

                1,866 Listeners

                Emergency Medicine Cases by Dr. Anton Helman

                Emergency Medicine Cases

                551 Listeners

                JAMA Clinical Reviews by JAMA Network

                JAMA Clinical Reviews

                498 Listeners

                Core EM - Emergency Medicine Podcast by Core EM

                Core EM - Emergency Medicine Podcast

                258 Listeners

                The Resus Room by Simon Laing, Rob Fenwick & James Yates

                The Resus Room

                109 Listeners

                EM Clerkship by Zack Olson, MD ; Mike Estephan, MD ; Maddie Watts, MD

                EM Clerkship

                811 Listeners

                The Curbsiders Internal Medicine Podcast by The Curbsiders Internal Medicine Podcast

                The Curbsiders Internal Medicine Podcast

                3,361 Listeners

                Emergency Medical Minute by Emergency Medical Minute

                Emergency Medical Minute

                261 Listeners

                Core IM | Internal Medicine Podcast by Core IM Team

                Core IM | Internal Medicine Podcast

                1,145 Listeners

                The Clinical Problem Solvers by The Clinical Problem Solvers

                The Clinical Problem Solvers

                515 Listeners

                Run the List by Walker Redd, Emily Gutowski, Navin Kumar, Joyce Zhou, Blake Smith

                Run the List

                247 Listeners

                Critical Care Scenarios by Brandon Oto, PA-C, FCCM and Bryan Boling, DNP, ACNP, FCCM

                Critical Care Scenarios

                249 Listeners

                Cardionerds: A Cardiology Podcast by CardioNerds

                Cardionerds: A Cardiology Podcast

                426 Listeners

                The Curious Clinicians by The Curious Clinicians

                The Curious Clinicians

                375 Listeners

                Critical Care Time by Critical Care Time Podcast

                Critical Care Time

                269 Listeners