lala878787
Answer
Carbon monoxide can be found in coal mines where it is very dangerous to coal miners since it is odorless and colorless. In the old days, miners would take canaries down inside the mine in little cages, if the canary died, they knew the air wasn't safe to breathe and they better get back up to ground. Now they have chemical detectors for the same thing.
Carbon monoxide is also found in cigarette smoke.
Although it's always poisonous, carbon monoxide does have a very important use: inside a blast furnace, carbon monoxide combines with iron ore to extract the oxygen in the ore and make pure iron. WIthout carbon monoxide, we wouldn't have any steel!
Carbon monoxide can be found in coal mines where it is very dangerous to coal miners since it is odorless and colorless. In the old days, miners would take canaries down inside the mine in little cages, if the canary died, they knew the air wasn't safe to breathe and they better get back up to ground. Now they have chemical detectors for the same thing.
Carbon monoxide is also found in cigarette smoke.
Although it's always poisonous, carbon monoxide does have a very important use: inside a blast furnace, carbon monoxide combines with iron ore to extract the oxygen in the ore and make pure iron. WIthout carbon monoxide, we wouldn't have any steel!
I have carbon monoxide poisoning?
embraer178
So I tried to commit suicide in my car with the exhaust gas and once I started to feel dizzy, lose some of my hearing, and my vision got messed up (within about 1 minute), I freaked out and got of of the car, and turned it off. I went for a walk outside and I can't walk straight, my hearing is still partially gone, and I have a pounding head ache with some nausea. Will I be okay in a few hours or a day or can I still die? Because that was terrifying and I don't want to die.
Answer
Carbon monoxide poisoning occurs after enough inhalation of carbon monoxide (CO). Carbon monoxide is a toxic gas, but, being
colorless, odorless, tasteless, and non-
irritating, it is very difficult for people to detect.
Carbon monoxide is a product of incomplete combustion of organic matter with insufficient oxygen supply to enable complete oxidation to carbon dioxide (CO2) and is often produced in domestic or industrial settings by older motor
vehicles and other gasoline-powered tools,
heaters, and cooking equipment. Exposures at
100 ppm or greater can be dangerous to human health.[1] Symptoms of mild acute poisoning include headaches, vertigo, and flu-like effects; larger exposures can lead to significant toxicity of the central nervous system and heart, and even death. Following acute poisoning, long-term sequelae often occur. Carbon monoxide can also have severe effects on the fetus of a pregnant woman. Chronic exposure to low
levels of carbon monoxide can lead to depression, confusion, and memory loss. Carbon monoxide mainly causes adverse
effects in humans by combining with hemoglobin to form carboxyhemoglobin (HbCO) in the blood. This prevents oxygen
binding to hemoglobin, reducing the oxygen-
carrying capacity of the blood, leading to hypoxia. Additionally, myoglobin and mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase are thought to be adversely affected. Carboxyhemoglobin
can revert to hemoglobin, but the recovery
takes time because the HbCO complex is fairly
stable. Treatment of poisoning largely consists of
administering 100% oxygen or providing hyperbaric oxygen therapy, although the optimum treatment remains controversial.[2] Oxygen works as an antidote as it increases the removal of carbon monoxide from
hemoglobin, in turn providing the body with
normal levels of oxygen. The prevention of
poisoning is a significant public health issue.
Domestic carbon monoxide poisoning can be
prevented by early detection with the use of household carbon monoxide detectors. Carbon monoxide poisoning is the most common type of fatal poisoning in many countries.[3] Historically, it was also commonly used as a
method to commit suicide, usually by deliberately inhaling the exhaust fumes of a
running car engine. Modern cars with
electronically controlled combustion and
catalytic converters produce so little carbon
monoxide that this is much less viable. Carbon
monoxide poisoning has also been implicated as the cause of apparent haunted houses.
Symptoms such as delirium and hallucinations
have led people suffering poisoning to think
they have seen ghosts or to believe their house is haunted.
Carbon monoxide poisoning occurs after enough inhalation of carbon monoxide (CO). Carbon monoxide is a toxic gas, but, being
colorless, odorless, tasteless, and non-
irritating, it is very difficult for people to detect.
Carbon monoxide is a product of incomplete combustion of organic matter with insufficient oxygen supply to enable complete oxidation to carbon dioxide (CO2) and is often produced in domestic or industrial settings by older motor
vehicles and other gasoline-powered tools,
heaters, and cooking equipment. Exposures at
100 ppm or greater can be dangerous to human health.[1] Symptoms of mild acute poisoning include headaches, vertigo, and flu-like effects; larger exposures can lead to significant toxicity of the central nervous system and heart, and even death. Following acute poisoning, long-term sequelae often occur. Carbon monoxide can also have severe effects on the fetus of a pregnant woman. Chronic exposure to low
levels of carbon monoxide can lead to depression, confusion, and memory loss. Carbon monoxide mainly causes adverse
effects in humans by combining with hemoglobin to form carboxyhemoglobin (HbCO) in the blood. This prevents oxygen
binding to hemoglobin, reducing the oxygen-
carrying capacity of the blood, leading to hypoxia. Additionally, myoglobin and mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase are thought to be adversely affected. Carboxyhemoglobin
can revert to hemoglobin, but the recovery
takes time because the HbCO complex is fairly
stable. Treatment of poisoning largely consists of
administering 100% oxygen or providing hyperbaric oxygen therapy, although the optimum treatment remains controversial.[2] Oxygen works as an antidote as it increases the removal of carbon monoxide from
hemoglobin, in turn providing the body with
normal levels of oxygen. The prevention of
poisoning is a significant public health issue.
Domestic carbon monoxide poisoning can be
prevented by early detection with the use of household carbon monoxide detectors. Carbon monoxide poisoning is the most common type of fatal poisoning in many countries.[3] Historically, it was also commonly used as a
method to commit suicide, usually by deliberately inhaling the exhaust fumes of a
running car engine. Modern cars with
electronically controlled combustion and
catalytic converters produce so little carbon
monoxide that this is much less viable. Carbon
monoxide poisoning has also been implicated as the cause of apparent haunted houses.
Symptoms such as delirium and hallucinations
have led people suffering poisoning to think
they have seen ghosts or to believe their house is haunted.
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