ZOOMER Magazine

CLEAR THE AIR

Feeling off? Make sure it’s not an undetected toxin in your home

- By Dr. Zachary Levine

TTHIS PAST January, 35 children and eight adults at a Montreal elementary school were taken to hospital for carbon monoxide exposure. The source was the heating system.

The elderly, children and people with heart or respirator­y conditions may be particular­ly sensitive to carbon monoxide. Initial symptoms of poisoning are headaches, nausea, vomiting and weakness. Later symptoms include visual changes, confusion, chest pain and, eventually, seizures, coma and death. Given that the initial symptoms are nonspecifi­c, they can be confused with the flu and not addressed until it’s too late.

Carbon monoxide is a colourless, odourless, tasteless toxic gas created when fuels such as gasoline, natural gas, wood or charcoal burn. Exhaust fumes from cars, trucks, stoves, gas ranges, generators and heating systems have carbon monoxide in them.

Prevent deaths from carbon monoxide by knowing how to recognize poisoning. And get out if you think you’re being exposed.

Clues that it may be carbon monoxide poisoning include that the initial symptoms improve when you’re away from the place of exposure and that symptoms are experience­d by multiple people in the same place. In up to 40 per cent of patients with significan­t carbon monoxide expos- ure, delayed neurologic symptoms can arise three to 240 days after recovery. Symptoms include personalit­y changes, movement disorders, weakness and thought difficulti­es. They usually occur within 20 days of carbon monoxide exposure, and can last for a year or more.

Dr. Zachary Levine is an assistant professor in the faculty of medicine at McGill University Health Centre and medical correspond­ent for AM740 (a ZoomerMedi­a property).

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