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Carbon Monoxide : Recognize the First Signs

Posted by on Oct 29, 2011 in Articles | 0 comments

CO Danger Carbon Monoxide : Recognize the First SignsCarbon monoxide is referred to as the silent killer since you cannot hear, see or smell it – however , you can avoid poisoning and discover ways to recognize the first indicators. Carbon Monoxide Detectors are essential for your safety.

What is Carbon Monoxide?
Carbon monoxide is the result of unfinished combustion of organic materials or petroleum gas. Inhaling the gas decreases the ability of your blood to transport oxygen, causing your bodies internal organs and cells starved of oxygen. Frequent sources of carbon monoxide inside your house include malfunctioning heating systems, gas devices as well as fire. Blocked flues as well as chimneys make that the gas can’t escape and will be breathed in by the unsuspecting person. In the United kingdom, around fifty individuals die every year inside their houses as a result of accidental carbon monoxide poisoning. Automobile exhausts happen to be another source of carbon monoxide.

Do you know the symptoms?
The signs and symptoms of mild carbon monoxide poisoning can often be non-specific and very similar to those associated with virus-like cold and influenza infections or even food poisoning: head ache, nausea or vomiting, abdominal pain, faintness and disorientation, a sore throat as well as dry coughing. More serious poisoning can lead to a fast and irregular heartrate, hyperventilation, confusion, sleepiness as well as difficulty breathing. Seizures and also loss of consciousness can also happen. A number of signs and symptoms can take place a couple of days and even several weeks after contact with carbon monoxide. These can include confusion, loss of memory as well as difficulties with co-ordination.

What can you do to prevent Carbon Monoxide Poisening?
You can prevent Carbon monoxide poisoning, therefore it really is crucial that you keep in mind possible triggers and the way to minimize the chance of exposure simply by putting all these security guidelines in to practice:

  • Have chimneys and flues inspected frequently
  • Make absolutely sure gas equipment as well as home heating systems will be checked each year
  • Fit carbon monoxide security alarms – you can buy from Do-it-yourself stores or Web-shops
  • Never run automobiles, motorcycles or even lawn mowers inside a closed garage

It’s also possible to avoid severe consequences simply by understanding how to recognize the indicators. Think about Carbon Monoxide Poisening if:

  • Several other people in your home or work place experience the same signs and symptoms
  • Symptoms often go away once you are away (by way of example, on vacation)
  • Symptoms are usually seasonal (for instance, head aches during the winter season as soon as indoor heating is used)

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California Air Resources Board Purchases Additional N2O/CO Analyzers from Los Gatos Research

Posted by on May 19, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., May 8, 2012 /PRNewswire/ – Los Gatos Research (LGR), the leader in precision trace gas analyzers, has received an order for five more of the company’s unique N2O/CO (nitrous oxide/carbon monoxide) trace gas analyzers from the California Air Resources Board (CARB). These particular instruments (part of LGR’s acclaimed Enhanced Performance series) deliver extremely stringent performance specifications, including better than fifty parts-per-trillion measurement precision, ultrahigh long-term stability, and over four decades of dynamic range for both gases. Furthermore, the instruments specifications are guaranteed for both stationary and mobile operation, i.e., while subject to typical ambient vibrations and temperature variations encountered in air-monitoring automobiles. No other analyzer commercially available provides this level of performance.

Although typically present at much lower concentrations in air than high profile greenhouse gases (GHGs) like carbon dioxide and methane, nitrous oxide is being increasingly studied because of its long lifetime and particularly powerful global warming potential – over 100 times stronger than carbon dioxide. N2O is a product of the nitrogen cycle, and can also be produced by combustion of biofuels. Measuring trace N2O concentrations can help scientists better understand natural and anthropogenic influences on the environment, climate change and the nitrogen cycle, including

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/california-air-resources-board-purchases-101800468.html

Wyckoff woman dies of carbon monoxide poisoning after car left running in garage

Posted by on May 19, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

WYCKOFF — An 82-year-old woman was found dead on her bedroom floor Friday, one flight above the garage where she left her car running for as long as 20 hours, police said.

Mary J. Ringley was the apparent victim of carbon monoxide poisoning, township Police Chief Benjamin Fox said in a statement. She was found a little after noon on Friday by her son, who went to her Covington Place house after being unable to reach her by phone, authorities said. Her dog was found dead in another bedroom, they said.

Police said there were no carbon monoxide detectors in the home.

Fox said in his statement that the car “was somehow inadvertently left running” after Ringley returned home at 4 p.m. Thursday. The township fire department measured carbon monoxide levels in the home at more than 1,000 parts per million, almost 30 times the amount considered to be toxic, authorities said.

Email: koloff@northjersey.com

WYCKOFF — An 83-year-old woman died of carbon monoxide poisoning in a Covington Place home after she accidentally left the car running in the attached garage Friday, police said.

Family members found the woman in her bedroom, which is above the garage about 12:30 p.m. The garage door

Article source: http://www.northjersey.com/news/bergen/bergen_safety/051812_Wyckoff_woman_dies_of_carbon_monoxide_poisoning_after_car_left_running_in_garage.html

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Builder John Riva fined over carbon monoxide poisoning death

Posted by on May 17, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

A builder has been fined £15,000 over health and safety failures which led to the death of a woman from carbon monoxide poisoning.

John Riva, 49, had been tasked with rebuilding a chimney at a house in Gifford, East Lothian.

However, he failed to clear it of debris, resulting in carbon monoxide from a living room fire leaking into the room and affecting three people.

Haddington Sheriff Court was told that Ceridwen Ross, 60, died as a result.

The Crown Office said the case showed that contractors had to be aware of the risks to others from their work.

The court was told that Riva carried out the work in August 2009.

‘Tragic incident’

But by October, three members of the Ross family, including Ceridwen Ross, had been affected by the fumes.

She died on 26 October 2009.

HSE inspector Gillian McLean added: “This was a tragic incident which could easily have been prevented if the accused had carried out simple and well-established tests to ensure the chimney was free from obstruction following building work he had carried out.

“These are standard and recognised

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-edinburgh-east-fife-18086870

4CM carbon monoxide sensor

Posted by on May 17, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

City Technology has introduced the 4CM, a carbon monoxide sensor designed for challenging environments. Developed to meet stringent toxic gas and mining standards, the unit performs in temperature and humidity extremes, responding to CO hazards and recovering in more than half the time of the industry average. Carbon monoxide exposure to concentrations as low as 100 ppm can be dangerous, and higher levels of exposure can be life threatening. In industry, the gas is routinely found in mining facilities, oil and gas plants, petrochemical facilities, steel plants and wastewater treatment plants. It is also major potential hazard when personnel are required to enter confined spaces.

Article source: http://www.securityinfowatch.com/product/10716095/city-technology-4cm-carbon-monoxide-sensor

DeLand Family Survives Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

Posted by on May 15, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments


WESH.com

Five people suffered carbon monoxide poisoning while cooking at a DeLand apartment on Mother’s Day, fire officials said.

Fire officials said the gas stove they were cooking on was not ventilating. Instead, it was filling the apartment with carbon monoxide.

“It causes anywhere from minor sickness — the longer you’re exposed to it — to severe illness, and can often be fatal,” DeLand Fire Department Deputy Chief Ron Snowberger said.

Family members said they were unaware of what was happening.

“Before we were done cooking, three of us was complaining about a headache, but we didn’t know why,” Liveina Rolle said.

Rolle said she was grateful that her family had a carbon monoxide detector in the house.

“Thank God the apartment has them in here, or who knows what would have happened,” she said.

Emergency workers treated five family members for carbon monoxide poisoning.

Fire officials said a carbon monoxide detector is just as critical to have in a home with gas appliances as a smoke detector.

The apartment complex has since given the family a brand new gas stove and replaced the carbon monoxide detector.


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DeLand Family Survives Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

Posted by on May 15, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

POSTED: 4:43 pm EDT May 15, 2012
UPDATED: 4:56 pm EDT May 15, 2012

Article source: http://www.wesh.com/news/31067744/detail.html

Carbon Monoxide kills off-roaders in Windsor

Posted by on May 13, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

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WINDSOR, Maine (NEWS CENTER) – Police say three people were killed by carbon monoxide while off-roading in the Kennebec County town of Windsor.

Police say three people, two men and a woman, went out around 7:00 PM Friday. They planned on driving their Jeep CJ off-road near some power lines.

They never came home.

A concerned family member took out after them on Saturday. Around 5:00 PM the family member found the jeep stuck in a bog with the three occupants dead inside.

Police say it appears that the vehicle got stuck and somehow filled with carbon monoxide. There was no trauma to any of the deceased.

The State Medical Examiner will investigate further.

The names of the victims are being withheld pending the notification of next of kin.

NEWS CENTER

Article source: http://www.wcsh6.com/news/article/200755/2/Carbon-Monoxide-kills-off-roaders-in-Windsor

GENEROUS DONATIONS OF CARBON MONOXIDE DETECTORS SINCE OXON HILL TRAGEDY

Posted by on May 13, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

LARGO, Md., May 11 — Prince George’s County issued the following news from the Fire/EMS Department:

There may be a potential killer creeping silently through your home right now. That killer is carbon monoxide. The poisoning deaths of five Oxon Hill residents in late April is a terrifying reminder that accidental carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning can happen any time.

There is no typical situation for accidental carbon monoxide poisoning. This one happened from a faulty heating system but can easily happen with any fuel-burning source used in or near a home. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner announced the official cause of death to all five of the victims was accidental and caused by Carbon Monoxide Toxicity. The Fire/EMS Department urges everyone to take this time to make sure they install CO alarms to protect families.

Since November 2009, a total of ten major carbon monoxide poisoning incidents have been reported in Prince George’s County. All together, these ten significant incidents resulted in the tragic death of eight of our citizens, as well as forty-five life-threatening exposures that were serious enough to warrant medical evaluation and/or hospital treatment. Last year alone, our Department responded to nearly eleven hundred individual reports of CO

Article source: http://www.fireengineering.com/news/2012/05/13/generous-donations-of-carbon-monoxide-detectors-since-oxon-hill-tragedy.html

Carbon monoxide detectors donated for Prince George’s County residents

Posted by on May 12, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

Two weeks after a deadly carbon monoxide poisoning in Prince George’s County, awareness of the dangers of the gas appear to be increasing.

Five people died April 23 in a home in Oxon Hill.

In light of that neighborhood tragedy, the county’s fire department has been given 400 carbon monoxide detectors. And they’re ready to be handed out.

Benjamin Robinson lives right across the street from where the five family members died last month.

The deaths hit him hard.

Robinson says he gets his boiler checked every year.

He has smoke detectors installed in his home, but no carbon monoxide detectors.

After news of the deaths spread, 400 detectors were donated to the Prince George’s County Fire Department this week.

It’s something people know they need, but, not everyone can afford it.

“Our hearts and sympathies go out to the family of the deceased, but we’re gonna try to make their loss something positive for other people in our community,” says Mark Brady of the fire department.

The house in Oxon Hill where the family died is still visibly marked with a bright, orange sticker, warning that the house is unsafe.

Neighbors see it everyday and are reminded of the dangers.

If you live in the county, you can get

Article source: http://www.wjla.com/articles/2012/05/carbon-monoxide-detectors-donated-for-prince-george-s-county-residents-75895.html

Source of carbon monoxide exposure for Tulsa students still unclear; some …

Posted by on May 12, 2012 in Articles | 0 comments

We still don’t have the definitive answer as to why almost 40 Tulsa school children and adults got ill during a visit to the Tulsa County Jail but we are learning new information that some were heat related illness.

On Thursday, 6th graders from Tulsa’s Bell Elementary were on a field trip at the jail when the students started complaining of symptoms similar to carbon monoxide exposure.

A doctor, who treated a number of those transported to the hospital, says a number of the 6th graders had measurable levels of carbon monoxide in their blood stream.

But Tulsa’s Haz-Mat Unit ruled out the jail as the source of the exposure.

“Our maintenance crew did a very thorough complex evaluation of all the systems of the David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center and found all of them to be working in compliance within their guidelines.  There was no breach.  There was no malfunction,” says Tulsa Deputy Shannon Clark.

Crews also tested the bus used to transport the children to the jail.

We also learned that not all of those treated went to the hospital for the possibility of carbon monoxide exposure.

Clark tells KRGM that the four jail employees that got sick were likely heat related problems.

“You have

Article source: http://www.krmg.com/news/news/local/source-carbon-monoxide-exposure-tulsa-students-sti/nN4dw/