Unstable angina and exposure to carbon monoxide
TL;DR: It is suggested that a number of patients admitted for coronary care with unstable angina may have significant carbon monoxide poisoning, which is often overlooked by attending physicians with the result that high concentration oxygen therapy is not administered.
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Abstract: Inhalation of small amounts of carbon monoxide diminishes the pain threshold in patients with stable angina pectoris. The aim of this study was to identify and describe patients who had been exposed unknowingly to toxic inhalations of this gas and subsequently presented to hospital with a clinical picture of unstable angina. Blood carboxyhaemoglobin levels of 104 patients referred with unstable angina to a coronary care unit were determined on admission. The likely source of carbon monoxide was identified in all patients. Three patients had definite carbon monoxide intoxication. Another five patients had evidence of minor exposure. When the three cases with carbon monoxide poisoning were excluded, the mean carboxyhaemoglobin level was 2.5% (+/- 1.3) for smokers (n = 30) and 0.6% (+/- 0.5) for non-smokers (n = 71). Use of fossil fuel combustion in an enclosed environment was responsible for the three most serious intoxications and one of the minor cases. We suggest that a number of patients admitted for coronary care with unstable angina may have significant carbon monoxide poisoning. This intoxication is often overlooked by attending physicians with the result that high concentration oxygen therapy is not administered, when it is in fact a necessary part of treatment.
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Clinical practice. Carbon monoxide poisoning.
TL;DR: From the Department of Hyperbaric Medicine, LDS Hospital; and theDepartment of Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine — both in Salt Lake City; andThe Department of hyperbaric medicine, Intermountain Medical Center, Murray, Utah.
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Carbon monoxide poisoning
TL;DR: There appears to be no marker or constellation of signs or symptoms at presentation that predicts long-term outcome following CO poisoning, which can leave the patient with permanent neurocognitive or affective problems.
237
Pathophysiology, clinics, diagnosis and treatment of heart involvement in carbon monoxide poisoning.
TL;DR: No specific treatment other than oxygen delivery can be advocated for cardiac toxicity at present, and 100% oxygen therapy should be continued until the patient is asymptomatic and carboxyhemoglobin levels decrease below 5-10%.
157
Carbon monoxide poisoning.
TL;DR: A 39-year-old female executive has a several-month history of fatigue, headache, and memory lapse Multiple specialists have performed evaluations, but no diagnosis has been established During a period of feeling worse than usual, she called a friend, who arrived at the residence to find the woman semicomatose and called 911 as discussed by the authors.
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Carbon monoxide cardiotoxicity.
Cristiano Gandini,Anna F. Castoldi,Stefano M. Candura,Carlo Locatelli,Raffaella Butera,Silvia G. Priori,Luigi Manzo +6 more
TL;DR: These investigations, as well as others performed in vitro, provide support for a direct action of carbon monoxide on the heart, in addition to systemic hypoxia produced by carboxyhemoglobin formation.
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References
Aspirin, Heparin, or Both to Treat Acute Unstable Angina
Pierre Théroux,H. Ouimet,John McCans,J.-G. Latour,P. Joly,G. Levy,E. Pelletier,Martin Juneau,J. Stasiak,P. DeGuise +9 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that in the acute phase of unstable angina, either aspirin or heparin treatment is associated with a reduced incidence of myocardial infarction, and there is a trend favoringHeparin over aspirin.
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Short-Term Effects of Carbon Monoxide Exposure on the Exercise Performance of Subjects with Coronary Artery Disease
Elizabeth N. Allred,Eugene R. Bleecker,Bernard R. Chaitman,Thomas E. Dahms,Sidney O. Gottlieb,Jack D. Hackney,Marcello Pagano,Ronald H. Selvester,Sandra M. Walden,Jane Warren +9 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that low levels of carboxyhemoglobin exacerbate myocardial ischemia during graded exercise in subjects with coronary artery disease.
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Effect of Low-Level Carbon Monoxide Exposure on Onset and Duration of Angina Pectoris: A Study in Ten Patients with Ischemic Heart Disease
TL;DR: Exposure to CO decreased exercise time to anginal pain and prolonged duration of pain after stopping exercise and 5 of 10 had deeper ST-segment depression.
238
Effect of passive smoking on angina pectoris.
TL;DR: Patients exposed to 15 cigarettes smoked within two hours in a well ventilated room or an unventilated room increased their resting heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and venous carboxyhemoglobin and decreased their heart rate and systolics blood pressure at angina.
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