Carbon Monoxide- Induced Asthma
An Invisible
Poisonous Gas: CARBON MONOXIDE.
Dear friends,
I hope you are all doing well. I have been sick for about
two long months, and right now I am back with lots of health. I made a few
discoveries about health which I’d like to share with you here.
I was diagnosed with asthma in late October of last year.
It was horrible. I did not trust American drugs, therefore I did not take any
asthma medications. Getting medications from back home was also difficult,
because it required a prescription from an American doctor (and American
doctors were not so willing to write a prescription for a medicine they did not
know). Thus, I was technically left one on one with asthma.
I searched for causes of asthma, and noticed that I
especially coughed very bad and had difficulty breathing while driving and
while walking in downtown Chicago. What’s prevalent poisonous gas in downtown
and major roads? CARBON MONOXIDE! All cars’ exhaust gases contain carbon
monoxide (CO)!
In order to find out more about my condition, I read two
types of sources: about asthma and about CO poisoning. Together the sources
pointed at my condition.
I eliminated most of CO exposure from my life, and my
condition quickly improved. Asthma is gone! In order to make sure that I was right
I walked in downtown Chicago for couple days and coughs and asthma symptoms
started coming back again!
The thing is CO is colorless, almost odorless, and most of
all poisonous gas. It sinks in the bottom of lungs because it is heavier than
air – therefore coughing it out is essential. Plus, CO blocks passage of
oxygen into blood (by forming carboxyhemoglobin). When I had asthma, I was
breathing, but was not getting any air…
You all live, study and work in large cities where there is
excessive amount of CO – mainly from cars. The condition does not come about
immediately, but extended period of exposure to significant levels of CO will
eventually cause asthma-like symptoms. A lot of these cases get mistaken for
cold and flu – doctors get to prescribe a lot of cough, cold, and flu
medicines. Antihistamines and antibiotics also get used. Such drugs do
provide a temporary relief from coughing and difficulty of breathing, but do
not remove causes of those ailments.
I recommend you the following measures in order to minimize
your exposure to high amounts of CO:
- Do not bike/jog/exercise along major roads.
- Do not walk a lot along busy streets, especially in
downtown areas.
- Do not use heat/AC too much because these devices suck in
CO which floats above roads.
If you are interested, please do not hesitate to email me
with any questions. I will be happy to provide more information, sources, and
references on this topic. Also, I would like to ask you to forward this
information to other people who might be interested.
Sincerely,
Mamurjon Rahimov, MA
Chicago, IL
Mamurjon@yahoo.com
A Brief list of references:
- Asthma Hotline. December 2006. www.noattacks.org
- American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.
November 2006. www.aaaai.org
- National Institute of Health. December 2006. www.nih.org
- Microsoft Encarta. “Air Pollution”
- “State of the Air 2005: Protect the Air You Breathe”. American
Lung Association. www.ala.org
- Carbon monoxide. Environmental Protection Agency. www.epa.org
- Living near a highway damages children's lungs: study.
Marlowe Hood. www.cnn.com
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car·box·y·he·mo·glo·bin
(kдr-bŏk'sē-hē'mə-glō'bĭn) Pronunciation
Key
n. The compound that is formed when inhaled carbon monoxide
combines with hemoglobin, binding more tightly than oxygen and rendering the
hemoglobin incapable of transporting oxygen.
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The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language,
Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by
Houghton Mifflin Company.
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