Carbon monoxide (CO) is an odorless, colorless, deadly gas. It can kill
you before you know it because you can't see it, taste it or smell it.
At lower levels of exposure, it can cause health problems. Some people
may be more vulnerable to CO poisoning such as fetuses, infants, children,
senior citizens and those with heart or lung problems. When CO is breathed
in by an individual, it accumulates in the blood and forms a toxic compound
known as carboxyhemoglobin (COHb). Hemoglobin carries oxygen in the
bloodstream to cells and tissues. Carbon monoxide attaches itself to
hemoglobin and displaces the oxygen that the body organs need.
Carboxyhemoglobin can cause headaches, fatigue, nausea,
dizzy spells, confusion and irritability. Later stages of CO poisoning
can cause vomiting, loss of consciousness and eventually brain damage or
death.
Carbon monoxide is a by-product of combustion of fossil fuels.
Fumes from automobiles contain high levels of CO. Appliances such as
furnaces, space heaters, clothes dryers, ranges, ovens, water heaters,
charcoal grills, fireplaces and wood burning stoves produce CO. Carbon
monoxide usually is vented to the outside if appliances function
correctly and the home is vented properly. Problems occur when furnace
heat exchanger crack or vents and chimneys become blocked. Insulation
sometimes can trap CO in the home.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission and the Knoxville Fire
Department recommend installing at least one carbon monoxide detector
with an audible alarm near the bedrooms. If a home has more than one
story, a detector should be placed on each story.
Be sure the detector has a testing laboratory label.
Checklist of where to look for problem sources of CO in the home
- A forced air furnace is frequently the source of leaks and should be carefully
inspected.
- Measure the concentration of carbon monoxide in the flue gases.
- Check furnace connections to flue pipes and venting systems to the outside
of the home for signs of corrosion, rust gaps, holes.
- Check furnace filters and filtering systems for dirt and blockage.
- Check forced air fans for proper installation and to assure correct air
flow of flue gases. Improper furnace blower installation can result in carbon
monoxide build-up because toxic gas is blown into rather than out of the house.
- Check the combustion chamber and internal heat exchanger for cracks, holes,
metal fatigue or corrosion. Be sure they are clean and free of debris.
- Check burners and ignition system. A flame that is mostly yellow in color
in natural gas fired furnaces is often a sign that the fuel is not burning
completely and higher levels of carbon monoxide are being released. Oil furnaces
with similar problems can give off an oily odor. Remember you can't smell
carbon monoxide.
- Check all venting systems to the outside including flues and chimneys for
cracks, corrosion, holes, debris, blockages. Animals and birds can build nests
in chimneys preventing gases from escaping.
- Check all other appliances in the home that use flammable fuels such as natural
gas, oil, propane, wood or kerosene. Appliances include water heaters, clothes
dryers, kitchen ranges, ovens or cooktops: woodburning stoves, gas refrigerators.
- Pilot lights can be a source of carbon monoxide because the by-products
of combustion are released inside the home rather than vented outside.
- Be sure space heaters are vented properly. Unvented space heaters that use
a flammable fuel such as kerosene can release carbon monoxide into the home.
- Barbecue grills should never be operated indoors under any circumstances
nor should stove tops or ovens that operate on flammable fuels be used to
heat a residence.
- Check for closed, blocked or bent flues, soot and debris.
- Check the clothes dryer vent opening outside the house for lint.