Raub J A, Benignus V A
United States Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Assessment, Mail Code B-243-01, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, USA.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2002 Dec;26(8):925-40. doi: 10.1016/s0149-7634(03)00002-2.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a colorless, tasteless, odorless, and non-irritating gas formed when carbon in fuel is not burned completely. It enters the bloodstream through the lungs and attaches to hemoglobin (Hb), the body's oxygen carrier, forming carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) and thereby reducing oxygen (O(2)) delivery to the body's organs and tissues. High COHb concentrations are poisonous. Central nervous system (CNS) effects in individuals suffering acute CO poisoning cover a wide range, depending on severity of exposure: headache, dizziness, weakness, nausea, vomiting, disorientation, confusion, collapse, and coma. At lower concentrations, CNS effects include reduction in visual perception, manual dexterity, learning, driving performance, and attention level. Earlier work is frequently cited to justify the statement that CO exposure sufficient to produce COHb levels of ca. 5% would be sufficient to produce visual sensitivity reduction and various neurobehavioral performance deficits. In a recent literature re-evaluation, however, the best estimate was that [COHb] would have to rise to 15-20% before a 10% reduction in any behavioral or visual measurement could be observed. This conclusion was based on (1) critical review of the literature on behavioral and sensory effects, (2) review and interpretation of the physiological effects of COHb on the CNS, (3) extrapolation from the effects of hypoxic hypoxia to the effects of CO hypoxia, and (4) extrapolation from rat behavioral effects of CO to humans. Also covered in this review article are effects of chronic CO exposure, the discovery of neuroglobin, a summary of the relatively new role for endogenous CO in neurotransmission and vascular homeostasis, groups which might be especially sensitive to CO, and recommendations on further research. The interested reader is directed to other published reviews of the literature on CO and historically seminal references that form our understanding of this ubiquitous gas.
一氧化碳(CO)是一种无色、无味、无臭且无刺激性的气体,它在燃料中的碳未完全燃烧时形成。它通过肺部进入血液循环,并附着在人体的氧气载体血红蛋白(Hb)上,形成碳氧血红蛋白(COHb),从而减少氧气(O₂)输送到人体的器官和组织。高浓度的碳氧血红蛋白是有毒的。急性一氧化碳中毒个体的中枢神经系统(CNS)效应范围广泛,这取决于接触的严重程度:头痛、头晕、虚弱、恶心、呕吐、定向障碍、意识模糊、虚脱和昏迷。在较低浓度下,中枢神经系统效应包括视觉感知、手部灵活性、学习能力、驾驶性能和注意力水平的下降。早期的研究经常被引用来支持这样的说法,即接触足以产生约5%碳氧血红蛋白水平的一氧化碳就足以导致视觉敏感度降低和各种神经行为表现缺陷。然而,在最近的一项文献重新评估中,最佳估计是在任何行为或视觉测量中观察到10%的下降之前,[碳氧血红蛋白]必须升至15% - 20%。这一结论基于以下几点:(1)对行为和感官效应文献的批判性审查;(2)对碳氧血红蛋白对中枢神经系统生理效应的审查和解释;(3)从低氧性缺氧的效应推断一氧化碳性缺氧的效应;(4)从一氧化碳对大鼠行为的效应推断对人类的效应。这篇综述文章还涵盖了慢性一氧化碳暴露的影响、神经球蛋白的发现、内源性一氧化碳在神经传递和血管稳态中相对较新作用的总结、可能对一氧化碳特别敏感的人群以及对进一步研究的建议。感兴趣的读者可参考其他已发表的关于一氧化碳的文献综述以及构成我们对这种普遍存在气体理解的具有历史意义的重要参考文献。