Can carbon monoxide poisoning cause a stroke?
My father-in-law recently suffered a stroke. Two days prior, he was working in the hold of his boat working on the engine, along with two other people. The hold is enclosed and the engine was running. Some of them started having a headache. My father-in-law shooed them out and he finished up in a few more minutes. For the next couple of days he complained of his stomach not feeling right. Then as he was walking up some steps, he fell and became unconscious for just a minute. Ambulance came. He was disoriented and threw up. Still in hospital but improving.
I'll add that he does take several high blood pressure medications, but has no history of strokes. (Blood pressure was high when ambulance came.) I know that we may never know, because it could have all been blood pressure related, but is/are there any definitive studies linking carbon monoxide poisoning and strokes?
Tags: ambulance, blood pressure medications, carbon monoxide, carbon monoxide poisoning, couple of days, definitive studies, few more minutes, headache, high blood pressure, stomach, strokes
The Carbon monoxide steals away the oxygen in the blood, resulting in red coloration of skin. Hence it deprived heart and brain in fact whole body of its Oxygen, so you are correct.
A stroke is the result of a lack of oxygen to the brain, for whatever reason. So, yes, his stroke could have been caused by the lack of oxygen due to the carbon monoxide exposure. Carbon monoxide inhibits the ability of the blood to absorb oxygen by binding to the hemoglobin more easily and tighter than oxygen.