Treatise on Poisons by Sir Robert Christison
2. The fumes of burning charcoal have been long known to be deleterious.
2197 words | Chapter 185
The early symptoms caused by them have been little noticed; for, as this
variety of poisoning generally occurs during sleep, the patient is
seldom seen till the symptoms are fully formed. In an attempt at
self-destruction described in a French journal, the first effects were
slight oppression, then violent palpitation, next confusion of ideas,
and at last insensibility.[2061] Tightness in the temples, and an
undefinable sense of alarm have also been remarked;[2062] and others
have, on the contrary, experienced a pleasing sensation that seduced
them to remain on the fatal spot.[2063] The best account of the
incipient symptoms has been given by Mr. Coathupe of Wraxhall, in an
account of an experiment he made with Joyce’s stove,—a preposterous
invention, the fuel of which was supposed by the inventor to burn
without contaminating the air, although it was neither more nor less
than prepared charcoal. Having closed every aperture in a room of the
capacity of eighty cubic yards, Mr. Coathupe kindled the stove and
watched the results. In four hours he had slight giddiness, in five
hours and a half intense giddiness, the desire to vomit without the
power, excessive prostration and incapability of muscular effort, a
frequent full throbbing pulse, a sense of distention of the cerebral
arteries, agonizing headache, chiefly in the hindhead, but no sense of
suffocation. At this time he experienced great difficulty in opening the
window and removing the stove; and in seven hours, when his wife entered
the room, he was unable to tell what was the matter, although quite
conscious of all that was passing. He then slowly recovered.[2064] A
similar account has also been given by Mr. Chapman of Tooting of the
effects of this notorious stove. A young gentleman, after being only one
hour in a chamber heated by it, felt first slight giddiness and
headache, and afterwards violent pain in the head and tightness round
the forehead and temples; the pupils became excessively dilated and
nearly insensible; there was constant ringing in the ears, a feeble
frequent pulse, paleness of the features and lividity of the lips and
hands, coldness of the extremities, laborious irregular breathing, and
extreme prostration. A temporary relief, obtained by stimulants, was
succeeded by violence; which, however, was subdued by blood-letting; and
he recovered.[2065] A set of cases, 70 in number, similar to the last
two, but milder, occurred in January, 1836, in the church of Downham in
Norfolk, which was heated by two of these stoves.[2066]
The following abstract of a case by Dr. Babington will convey an
accurate idea of the advanced symptoms. The waiter of a tavern and a
little boy, on going to bed, left a choffer of charcoal burning beside
it; and next morning were found insensible. The boy died immediately
after they were discovered. The waiter had stertorous breathing, livid
lips, flushing of the face, and a full, strong pulse; for which
affections he was bled to ten ounces. When Dr. Babington first saw him,
however, the pulse had become feeble, the breathing imperfect, and the
limbs cold; the muscles were powerless but twitched with slight
convulsions, the sensibility gone, the face pale, the eyelids closed,
the eyes prominent and rolling, the tongue swollen and the jaw locked
upon it, and there was a great flow of saliva from the mouth. The
employment of galvanism at this time caused an evident amendment in
every symptom. But it was soon abandoned; because each time it was
applied, the excitement was rapidly followed by corresponding
depression. Cold water was then dashed upon him, ammonia rubbed on his
chest, and oxygen thrown into the lungs; through which means a warm
perspiration was brought out, and his state rapidly improved. He was
nearly lost, however, during the subsequent night by hemorrhage from the
divided vein; but next day he was so well that he could even speak a
little. For two days afterwards the left side of the face was paralyzed,
and his mental faculties were somewhat disordered.[2067]—In such cases
as this the stupor is generally very deep. There is a case in a French
Journal of a girl, who, after remaining some time in a small close
chamber heated by a charcoal choffer, fell down insensible, remained in
that state for three hours, and found, on recovering from her lethargy,
that the choffer had fallen, and burnt the skin and subjacent fat of the
thighs to a cinder.[2068]
Occasionally the stage of stupor is followed, as in some other varieties
of narcotic poisoning, by a stage of delirium, at times of the furious
kind, or by a state resembling somnambulism.[2069] It does not follow
that recovery is certain because coma has thus given place to
delirium,—an alteration, which in most varieties of narcotic poisoning
is considered a sure sign of recovery. Collard de Martigny has related a
case which eventually proved fatal, notwithstanding this sign of
improvement.[2070]
The narcotism induced by breathing charcoal fumes often lasts a
considerable length of time,—much longer indeed than the effects of
other narcotic poisons. This will appear sufficiently from the case
described by Dr. Babington. One of the people, mentioned at the
commencement of this chapter as having been suffocated at Gerolzhofen,
lingered five days in a state of coma before he expired.
Commonly in cases of recovery, there is found to have been no
consciousness of any thing going on around, or recollection of what
passed subsequently to the first impressions of poisoning. The reverse,
however, occurred in Mr. Coathupe’s experiment; and a similar instance
has been published, where the individual, though apparently insensible,
knew when the room was first entered by strangers, and heard them call
him by name and bid him put out his tongue, and stretch forth his
arm,—without, however, his having the power to answer, or in any way to
express the consciousness of understanding them.[2071]
Poisoning with charcoal vapour has become a subject of great importance
in French medical jurisprudence, partly on account of the frequency with
which it is resorted to for the purpose of committing suicide, and
partly because repeated attempts have been made to conceal murder by
arranging matters so as to present the appearances of suicide. M.
Devergie says, that in the years 1834 and 1835 no fewer than 360 cases
of poisoning with charcoal-vapour occurred in Paris, of which nearly
four-fifths proved fatal; and he has given the particulars of two
attempts to conceal murder under the appearance of death from this
cause.[2072]
The subject has therefore been carefully examined by various authors,
but by none so successfully as by M. Devergie; of whose important
researches the following is a brief analysis.
In stating the various sources whence charcoal-vapour may become
incidentally the cause of death, he dwells particularly on the risk of
its admission from adjoining vents, even in other houses from that where
the accidents happen,—because there may be currents in the apartment
which occasion back-draught. Three remarkable cases of this kind, very
obscure in their origin, have been related by M. d’Arcet.[2073]
The very discrepant effects of the poison on different individuals,
simultaneously and to appearance alike exposed to it, have usually been
explained by reference to the great density of the gas, which
consequently accumulates near the floor. Some, however, have doubted the
fact that the gas is unequally diffused. Mr. Taylor in particular says
he ascertained by analysis, that air collected above and below a choffer
of burning charcoal was equally contaminated, that what was collected a
foot above its level contained 4·65 per cent., and that another portion
taken the same distance below it contained 4·5 of carbonic acid.[2074]
M. Devergie has discovered the source of these discrepant opinions. He
has found,[2075] that, notwithstanding the high density of carbonic acid
gas, the currents caused by the heat, disengaged when charcoal is burnt
in a room, without an issue for the products of combustion, produce an
equable mixture of gases at all elevations in the apartment, provided
the air be examined while still warm, and not long after the charcoal
has burnt out; but that, at a later period, such as twelve hours, the
carbonic acid partly separates and sinks, so that, while the air at the
top contains only a 78th, that near the floor contains four times as
much, or a 19th of carbonic acid gas.
Disputes have also arisen as to the precise nature of the emanations
from burning charcoal,—some believing that carbonic acid is alone
discharged in such quantity as to prove injurious, and is singly
sufficient to account for the effects which have been observed,—while
others maintain that carbonic oxide, carburetted-hydrogen, or some
peculiar pyrogenous vapour, may be also formed, and prove the real cause
of the active properties of the vapour. According to the researches of
Orfila, charcoal in a state of vivid ignition emits carbonic acid only,
a hundred parts of the consumed air having been ascertained by him to be
composed of 42 azote, 46 common air, and 12 carbonic acid. But when the
combustion is low, a hundred parts consist of 52 azote, 20 common air,
14 carbonic acid, and 14 carburetted-hydrogen; so that not only is the
air more thoroughly consumed; but likewise an additional poisonous gas
is brought into action.[2076] The difference thus indicated has been
supposed to account for what is often observed in countries where
charcoal choffers are much in use for warming close apartments,—namely,
that the practice is attended with most danger when the combustion is
low, and that it is unsafe to close the doors of an apartment till the
fuel is in a state of vivid ignition. M. Guérard again maintains, that
when the supply of air is incomplete and combustion low, carbonic oxide
gas is formed in considerable quantity; and that this gas, confessedly a
much more powerful narcotic than carbonic acid, is probably the cause of
many cases of poisoning with charcoal fumes.[2077] M. Devergie doubts
the exactness of Orfila’s experiments on this head, but gives no new
analysis. He observes that charcoal-vapour gives the air of a room a
peculiar odour and bluish misty appearance, the latter of which slowly
diminishes, and in twelve hours disappears; and that possibly there may
be both a little carbonic oxide and carburetted-hydrogen in the air. But
nevertheless he is of opinion that the carbonic acid alone is adequate
to occasion all the effects observed in man or animals.[2078] Professor
Hünefeld is of a different opinion, and has supplied the most
satisfactory explanation of the important fact, that charcoal fumes are
most noxious when the fuel has been just kindled and burns low; for he
ascertained that at first it gives out a pyrogenous acid, which
occasions headache and tendency to sickness, and which is not a product
of combustion at the moment, but exists ready formed; and that when
charcoal is at a full red heat, this noxious substance is no longer
given off.[2079] Mr. Coathupe also thinks the cause of poisoning by
charcoal fumes is an unknown pyrogenous body, and not carbonic acid
gas.[2080]—This department of inquiry is obviously susceptible of more
precise information. But meanwhile, whatever may be the probability
that, besides carbonic acid, some other gases, or some peculiar
pyrogenous body, may occasionally exist in charcoal fumes, and increase
their poisonous property, little doubt can exist that the carbonic acid
is singly sufficient to account for all the leading phenomena.
M. Devergie has been led to the opinion that air, in which a fourth part
of its oxygen has been converted into carbonic acid, and which therefore
contains five per cent. of that gas, is amply enough impregnated to
occasion death.[2081] This corresponds with the observations of M.
Ollivier, who found that three per cent. was as much as could be
breathed with impunity even for a moderate length of time.[2082] Less,
however, will suffice to prove injurious or even fatal, if the air be
breathed long. Mr. Coathupe inferred from a rough estimate, that in the
dangerous experiment he made upon himself, the carbonic acid, if
uniformly diffused in the apartment, which was probably the case,
amounted to only two per cent.; but his data were inadequate.[2083]
Proceeding from the fact that five per cent. of carbonic acid is
sufficient to cause death, Devergie points out what quantity of charcoal
is required to form that proportion,—a question of no small moment in
respect to charges of murder, concealed under the semblance of suicide
by suffocation with charcoal fumes. And he shows, that a French bushel,
or decalitre, weighing 3000 grammes, is sufficient for a close apartment
of 1275 cubic mètres, that is 6·6 pounds avoirdupois for a space of 1666
English cubic yards, provided the gas be uniformly diffused.[2084] The
quantity of charcoal burnt in a given case may be arrived at pretty
nearly from the weight of ashes left, which is estimated in round
numbers at a twenty-fifth by himself,[2085] and at a twentieth by
Ollivier.[2086]
It is important to remark that complete closure of an apartment is by no
means essential for the action of carbonic acid, whether disengaged
within it or introduced from without. For poisoning has occurred, even
where a window was partially open.[2087]
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