| Literature DB >> 31788375 |
Sebastian Casillas1, Antonio Galindo1, Luis A Camarillo-Reyes1, Joseph Varon2, Salim R Surani3.
Abstract
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a gas product of combustion, considered highly poisonous. Prolonged CO exposure is responsible for more than half of fatal poisonings and is also one of the leading causes of poisoning in Western countries. We aimed to compare the effectiveness of therapy with hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) versus normobaric oxygen (NBO) in the setting of carbon monoxide poisoning (COP). We independently searched the National Library of Medicine's Medline (PubMed™), ScienceDirect™, and Scielo™ for any relevant studies published from 1989 to 2017, using the following keywords: hyperbaric therapy, hyperbaric oxygenation, normobaric therapy, carbon monoxide poisoning, carboxyhemoglobin, Haldane effect. We analyzed the studies that suggested the effectiveness of HBO or NBO. Also, we searched for studies related to COP; including history, epidemiology (risk factors, incidence, demographics), pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and treatment. Sixty-eight articles were found, sixteen of which dealt with either HBO or NBO or both. Twelve suggested HBO as the treatment of choice in COP; four studies indicated that NBO was an adequate treatment due to its cost-effectiveness and availability in the emergency department (ED). HBO has been shown in several studies to be effective in moderate to high-risk COP situations, being the therapy of choice to avoid sequelae, especially neurologically. NBO can be considered as a reasonable alternative due to its cost-effectiveness. The availability and understanding of different therapeutic interventions are critical in the management of patients with COP in ED and the Critical Care unit.Entities:
Keywords: carbon monoxide poisoning; haldane effect; hyperbaric oxygen therapy; normobaric oxygen therapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31788375 PMCID: PMC6855999 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.5916
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Flow diagram for study selection according to PRISMA 2009 guidelines
HBO and NBO studies comparison
Abbreviations: HBO, hyperbaric oxygenation; NBO normobaric oxygenation; ROL, review of literature; PS, prospective study; MGC, multi-group comparison; RCT, randomized control trial; CR, case report; RCS, retrospective cohort study; CO, carbon monoxide; COHb, carboxyhemoglobin; ACOP, acute carbon monoxide poisoning
| Studies supporting the effectiveness of HBO | Studies supporting the effectiveness of NBO | ||||
| Article | Type of study | Comments | Article | Type of study | Comments |
| Koren et al. 1991 [ | PS | Reduce the rate of spontaneous abortion in pregnancy with CO poisoning. In two Cases were COHb was 39% and 21%, HBO was applied and normal outcome was seen in the 1st year of life. | Sen et al. 2010 [ | CR | NBO should be administered until COHb is normalized, since HBO usage is controversial. |
| Jang et al. 2017 [ | PS | Improved mitochondrial dysfunction. | Weaver L. 2009 [ | CR/ROL | High-flow 100% oxygen is safe, available and inexpensive compared to HBO. |
| Garrabou et al. 2011 [ | PS | HBO was more effective than NBO in moderate ACOP, and promotes up to 32% of mitochondrial recovery. | Bor-Kucukatay et al. 2010 [ | MGC | NBO caused a decrement in red blood cells aggregation, HBO caused increment of free radical production. |
| Camporesi 1999 [ | ROL | HBO started in the first six hours, decreased mortality from 30% to 13.5%. | Bartolome et al. 2010 [ | ROL | NBO is the treatment for election with the proper follow up. |
| Jurič et al. 2015 [ | MGC | HBO reduced toxic effects of CO in astrocytes while NBO showed no beneficial effect. | |||
| Weaver et al. 2002 [ | RCT | Reduced the cognitive sequelae by 46%. | |||
| Perez et al. 2017 [ | CR/ROL | The only effective treatment to avoid delayed neuropathy, since decreases COHb to 23 minutes (against 74 minutes on NBO). | |||
| Santiago I. 2003 [ | ROL | Decreased lipid peroxidation in the brain and reduced neurological sequelae. | |||
| Lueken et al. 2006 [ | CR | Improvement in cognitive and neuropsychiatry symptoms after one session. | |||
| Thom et al. 1995 [ | RCT | In 60 patients with mild-moderate COP presented within six hours. Neurologic sequelae was seen in 23% of control group and none in the HBO group. | |||
| Ducasse et al. 1995 [ | RCT | 26 non-comatose patients with acute COP were divided in two groups. At 12 h no patient in the HBO group (0/13) had abnormal clinical findings, compared to the NBO group with 5/13. | |||
| Huang et al. 2017 [ | RCS | More than one session of HBO reduced mortality in patients <20 years old. | |||