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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!pitt!speedy.cs.pitt.edu!km
- From: km@speedy.cs.pitt.edu (Ken Mitchum)
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: Re: CO poisoning and alcohol
- Message-ID: <15804@pitt.UUCP>
- Date: 24 Jul 92 21:11:04 GMT
- References: <1992Jul22.184811.16576@ttinews.tti.com>
- Sender: news@cs.pitt.edu
- Reply-To: km@cs.pitt.edu (Ken Mitchum)
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: Computer Science Dept., University of Pittsburgh
- Lines: 18
-
- In article <1992Jul22.184811.16576@ttinews.tti.com> reid@metis.tti.com (Reid Kneeland) writes:
- >A friend is writing a novel (murder mystery), and had this medical
- >question: would a high percentage of blood alcohol acclerate death by
- >carbon monoxide poisoning? In more concrete terms, would a drunk
- >person die faster in a locked garage in which a car was running than
- >they would if they were sober?
-
- I hope indeed this is for a novel and not for personal experimentation!
- I know of no reason why the drunk person would die faster. Carbon
- monoxide kills by causing tissue hypoxia - CO binds to hemoglobin
- much more readily than O2 does. While alcohol can cause respiratory
- depression, leading to hypoxia, this is really only in big (fatal)
- doses. So I don't think being drunk would effect death by
- carbon monoxide, but someone else here may know more about it.
- Any forensic pathology types out there?
-
- -km
-
-