Carbon monoxide toxicity
Background
can co-occur with HCN (cyanide) toxicity in certain fires like industrial fires, (treat HCN with Sodium thiosulfate 12.5grams).
multiple pts from same building/car. winter months.
1/2 life of COHb:
decreases from 5 hrs to 1 hr with 100% FiO2,
to 20 min 2.5 atm HBO.
Workup
- ECG
- CXR
- CT Head
- Pregnancy test
Diagnosis
1. Symptoms generally depend on CO level (i.e. carboxyhemoglobin)
20-40%:
CNS SX first... Dizziness, Headache, weakness, n/v, disturbed judgment, confusion, decreased visual acuity.
Often misdiagnosed as 'Flu', 'viral syndrome.'
40-60%: CP, DOE, Tachycardia, tachypnea, ataxia, syncope, seizures
>60%: arrhythmias, hypotension, coma, death
2. To get CO level, ABG with carboxyhemoglobin level (this needs to be specifically requested; done by co-oximetry)
Pulse Ox usually NORMAL.
Need co-oximetry. Oxygen Sat gap, SpO2-SaO2 increases as COHb increases.
mortality usually due to ventricular arrhythmias.
Treatment
- Treat with 100% oxygen by tight-fitting mask or endotracheal tube
- Measure CO level q2-4 hours until <10%
- smokers... COHb level up to 10%
- <5% is normal
- levels not predictive of outcome
- lactate more useful for inferring tissue hypoxia
Hyperbaric Tx^
Indications
- sz, coma, focal deficit
- COHb > 25%
- COHb > 15% in pregnancy (fetal Hb has greater affinity for CO, and nml intrauterine Mt Everest makes CO poisoning very toxic to fetus)
- myocardial ischemia, arrhythmias
^Hyperbaric treatment is of contraversial utility (3 days of 100% FiO2 may be equivalent to hyperbaric)
Disposition
Admit
- all symptomatic CO poisonings
- all > 20%
Gas company and Fire Dept will test home/work environments.
Source
Tibbles, PM et al. NEJM. Hyperbaric oxygen Rx. 1996.
Scheinkestel, C. Med J Aust. 1999. 170: 2203-2210.
