Clinical Practice and Cases in Emergency Medicine (Feb 2020)

An Unusual Case of Carbon Monoxide Poisoning from Formic and Sulfuric Acid Mixture

  • Muhammed Ershad,
  • Athanasios Melisiotis,
  • Zachary Gaskill,
  • Matthew Kelly,
  • Richard Hamilton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5811/cpcem.2019.10.44265
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1

Abstract

Read online

Formic acid, when combined with sulfuric acid, gets dehydrated to form carbon monoxide (CO). A 27-year-old female was found unconscious inside a car, next to a container with a mixture of sulfuric acid and formic acid. Concentrations of up to 400 parts per million of CO were measured inside the car post ventilation. Serum carboxyhemoglobin level was 15% after receiving 100% oxygen for two hours. The patient received hyperbaric oxygen therapy after which she was extubated with normal mental status. On follow-up after three months, she demonstrated neurocognitive abnormalities suggestive of delayed neurological sequelae from CO exposure.