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Sources
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a colorless, odorless, and tasteless gas. It may temporarily
accumulate at harmful levels, especially in calm weather during winter and early spring, when fuel combustion reaches a peak and carbon monoxide is chemically most stable due to the low temperatures.
Sources of carbon monoxide include:
- Automobile emissions. (High levels are possible near large parking lots, traffic jams, or
crowded city streets, where large numbers of slow-moving cars accumulate.)
- Home/building heating.
- Volcanoes, thunderstorms and forest fires.
- Vegetation during various growth stages.
- The chemical transformation of methane, a gas emitted from decaying plants in swamps and
marshlands.
Carbon monoxide from natural sources usually dissipates quickly over a large area, posing no
threat to human health.
Health Effects
Carbon monoxide enters the blood stream by combining with hemoglobin, the substance that
carries oxygen to the cells. This combination occurs 200 times more readily with carbon monoxide than with oxygen, reducing the amount of oxygen distributed throughout the body by the blood stream. Carbon monoxide adversely impacts health in many ways:
- It affects the central nervous system at relatively low concentrations.
- It weakens heart contractions, lowering the volume of blood distributed to various parts of
the body.
- It significantly reduces a healthy person's ability to perform manual tasks, such as working, jogging and walking.
- It causes healthy people to feel tired and drowsy from short-term exposure to
concentrations greater than 30 parts per million (ppm).
- It causes shortness of breath and chest pain in people with heart disease at exposures as low as 10 ppm.
- It induces irritability, headaches, rapid breathing, blurred vision, lack of coordination,
nausea, dizziness, confusion and impaired judgement in healthy people at levels greater than 35 ppm.
Even three or four hours after exposure, half the excess carbon monoxide may remain in the
blood stream.
People especially susceptible to CO include:
- Children (and the human fetus).
- The elderly.
- Those with respiratory or heart illnesses. (The 4.2 million people in the U.S. suffering from angina pectoris - a disease characterized by brief spasmodic attacks of chest pain due to insufficient oxygen levels in the heart muscles - are especially susceptible.)
- Those with anemia.
- Those exposed for long periods of time, such as traffic officers and people sitting in
parked/idling cars over sustained periods.
- Cigarette smokers. (Smoking while driving in heavy traffic may result in increased exposure
- from cigarette smoke and engine exhaust. Tests of automobile drivers show exposure to high levels of carbon monoxide can impair a driver's judgment and ability to respond rapidly in traffic. It can also impair vision and produce headaches.)
At concentrations commonly monitored in the ambient air, carbon monoxide does not appear
to adversely affect plants, wildlife, or materials.
Carbon monoxide is a common indoor air contaminant. Concentrations of 1 to
2 ppm are common in homes with normal gas-fired furnaces; malfunctioning furnaces
can lead to indoor concentrations of up to 120 ppm.
Health Effects of Air Pollutants || Air Quality & Health
Last Reveiwed: January 2007 Next Review: January 2008 Last Revised: Friday January 19 2007
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