RI 2304 The Treatment of Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 725 KB
- Publication Date:
- Dec 1, 1921
Abstract
Carbon monoxide poisoning is one of the most widely distributed and most
frequent causes of industrial accidents . Carbon monoxide gas is a product of incomplete
combustion , and since it is without color , odor , or taste , its presence
is frequently unsuspected in many places where it exists . It is an ever present
danger about blast and coke furnaces , smelters , and foundries . It may be found
in buildings having a leaky furnace or chimney , and in buildings where a gas
stove is used without a proper flue connection , such as is often found in tenements
, tailor shops , and boarding houses . Hospitals receive annually a great
number of victims of poisoning , either by accident or in an attempt at suicide ,
from artificial illuminating gas . People may be affected by leaks wherever
water gas is formed or used . The exhaust gases from gasoline motors under average
running conditions usually contain 5 to 7 per cent carbon monoxide , and
sometimes as much as 13 per cent ; deaths from running an automobile engine in a
closed garage are not infrequent . A similar danger may arise in operating gasoline
engines in launches without sufficient ventilation . The gas is formed also
in stoker rooms , in gun turrets on battleships , in petroleum refineries , and by
the Lablanc soda process in cement and brick plants . In underground mines carbon
monoxide may appear as the result of shot firing , mine explosions , or mine
fires , and in tunnels where automobiles , coal or oil - burning locomotives are
operated .
In spite of the common occurrence of carbon monoxide poisoning there
appears to be no uniformly recognized treatment for a person overcome by carbon
monoxide . In the rescue work of the United States Bureau of Mines , however , a
method has been developed which has been supported by laboratory investigation ,
and has proved successful in practical experience , over a period of years .
As
outlined in this article , the method is useful in the hands of first -aid men as
well as physicians .
Citation
APA:
(1921) RI 2304 The Treatment of Carbon Monoxide PoisoningMLA: RI 2304 The Treatment of Carbon Monoxide Poisoning. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1921.