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Carbon Monoxide Toxicity

Journal of Burn Care & Research, 2009
Inhalation injury consists of a multitude of insults, the first of which is the toxic gases inhaled during the combustion of organic and inorganic substances. Significant morbidity and mortality in patients with burn injury occur due to the varying effects of these gases.
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Carbon monoxide intoxication

2015
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a colorless, odorless, nonirritant gas that accounts for numerous cases of CO poisoning every year from a variety of sources of incomplete combustion of hydrocarbons. These include poorly functioning heating systems, indoor propane-powered forklifts, indoor burning of charcoal burning briquettes, riding in the back of pick-up ...
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Carbon Monoxide and the Pancreas

Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, 2012
Carbon monoxide (CO), often referred to as the silent killer, is a colorless, odorless and tasteless gas. It combines with hemoglobin to produce carboxyhemoglobin, which is ineffective for delivering oxygen to animal and human tissues. On the other hand, CO is endogenously produced in the body as a byproduct of heme degradation catalyzed by the heme ...
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Carbon monoxide and hypertension

Journal of Hypertension, 2004
The enzymatic action of heme oxygenase yields carbon monoxide, biliverdin and iron. Carbon monoxide is implicated in many physiological processes, including the regulation of vascular tissue contractility and apoptosis. By stimulating the soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC)/cGMP pathway and activating K channels in vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs ...
Joseph F, Ndisang   +2 more
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Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

New England Journal of Medicine, 2002
Carbon monoxide poisoning is the most common type of accidental poisoning in the United States, accounting for thousands of emergency department visits and some 800 deaths annually. Carbon monoxide, an insidious byproduct of incomplete hydrocarbon combustion, is generated in toxic amounts by internal-combustion engines, fossil-fuel furnaces, and fires.
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Carbon Monoxide Dehydrogenases

2018
Carbon monoxide dehydrogenases (CODHs) catalyze the reversible oxidation of CO with water to CO2, two electrons, and two protons. Two classes of CODHs exist, having evolved from different scaffolds featuring active sites built from different transition metals. The basic properties of both classes are described in this overview chapter.
Jae-Hun, Jeoung   +2 more
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Carbon monoxide poisoning

Emergency Nurse, 2003
Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning remains a common preventable cause of morbidity and mortality. The classic signs of cherry red lips, cyanosis and retinal haemorrhage rarely occur, however.
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Two-dimensional copper nanosheets for electrochemical reduction of carbon monoxide to acetate

Nature Catalysis, 2019
Wesley Luc   +13 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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