hinkley 5 hours ago

> Infused in the bloodstream, scavenger hemoproteins like RcoM-HBD-CCC rapidly bind to carbon monoxide molecules, reducing the time it takes to clear half of the carbon monoxide in the blood to less than a minute, compared to more than hour with pure oxygen therapy and five hours without any treatment.

  • lawlessone 3 hours ago

    I can see a market in selling this to urban cyclists..

    I've seen people doing that get quite a bit of exhaust fumes to the face.

    • hinkley 2 hours ago

      Breath control is an underrated skill.

jfarlow 7 hours ago

Here's the full sequence of the protein, found in the supplement [1]

KSSEPASVSAAERRAETEQHKLEQENPGIVWLDQHGRVTAENDVALQILGPAGEQSLGVAQDSLEGIDVVQLHPEKSRDKLRFLLQSKDVGGSPVKSPPPVAMMINIPDRILMIKVSSMIAAGGASGTSMIFYDVTDLTTEPSGLPAGGSAPSHHHHHH

It is a protein encoding the PxRcoM-1 heme binding domain with C94S mutation and a C-terminal 6xHis tag (RcoM-HBD-C94S)

[1] https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2501389122#supplementa...

  • meisel 5 hours ago

    Thanks for that sequence, I can really picture it now

  • sunrunner 5 hours ago

    This looks like an puzzle input to a day from Advent of Code.

  • mhb 4 hours ago

    That doesn't look right. I think the problem is in the last quarter. Exercise for the reader.

kazinator 5 hours ago

The existing methylene blue substance is also effective in cases of CO poisoning.

1933 paper:

https://journals.physiology.org/doi/abs/10.1152/ajplegacy.19...

"Methylene Blue as an Antidote to CO Poisoning", Matilda Moldenhauer Brooks

  • skadamou 4 hours ago

    This paper is interesting but I want to point out there is a difference between a research paper showing that something is hypothetically feasible and something that is actually useful clinically.

    Clinically, methylene blue is used to treat a different condition, methemeglobinemia and is not used to treat carbon monoxide poisoning which relies on hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

    • kazinator 2 hours ago

      The researcher used non-human animals; it worked on them.

      The hypothetical part was only that it might also work on humans.

      In any case, it seems the result was good enough as a clinical trial from the point of view of veterinary medicine, in regard to those specific types of animals.

searine 8 hours ago

This research was funded by multiple NIH grants, a Department of Defense grant, and the Martin Family Foundation.

dtgriscom 8 hours ago

How is this administered? Seems like a crucial detail to omit.

  • elric 8 hours ago

    > This has the potential to become a rapid, intravenous antidote for carbon monoxide

    So intravenously, presumably.

  • DonHopkins 8 hours ago

    You can spread it on bread, melt it over pancakes, rub it all over corn on the cob, put it in baked potatoes, etc, promise!

sandworm101 4 hours ago

CO poisioning is one of those strange cases treatable using scuba diving. Recompression therapy, which can be theoretically aped under water, can be like magic. In some cases the patient just wakes up like nothing is wrong. No drugs. No invasive treatment. Get deep enough and hemoglobin isnt totally necessary for getting O2 where it needs to be.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK470531/

pfdietz 4 hours ago

This looks like a therapy you can only get once in your life, after which it has acted like a vaccine and your immune system would react to it.

  • isk517 2 hours ago

    If getting carbon monoxide poisoning once isn't enough to make you invest in a few detectors then I don't know what will

bananapub 9 hours ago

not very on topic, but for those who missed one of the more surreal reddit threads in history:

- [MA] Post-it notes left in apartment [0]

- and the update from OP a while later [1]

[0]: https://www.reddit.com/r/legaladvice/comments/34l7vo/ma_post...

[1]: https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/49zfvb/what_is_t...

  • gus_massa 9 hours ago

    It looks like he found a note in his room and see some strange thing in the window, and someone somehow says it's CO but it may be that the OP has unrelated hallucinations. Is this a symptom of CO poisoning? I think you only get sleepy, faint and die.

    • maxbond 8 hours ago

      Chronic exposure can lead to memory loss, yes. You're describing the symptoms of acute exposure.

    • hinkley 8 hours ago

      CO exposure is accumulative. If you’re around an intense source of it you’re toast. But with a small point source or decent ventilation it kills you slower.

      And your body produces new blood cells every day, so minor sources like wood smoke or burning a candle don’t dose you enough to be a problem, unless perhaps your day job is as an athlete.

      • hinkley 5 hours ago

        Also looks like the half-life of CO in the blood is around five hours.

DonHopkins 10 hours ago

>New Protein Therapy Shows Promise as Antidote for Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

So Shatner was right all along: not only is Promise Margarine good for lowering your cholesterol level, but it can also treat carbon monoxide poisoning! And it tastes like butter, promise.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3wf717fKFE

  • majkinetor 10 hours ago

    I don't see a relation of any kind and I hate commercials maybe more than anybody else, but it's always a good time for a funny one with Shatner :)

    • DonHopkins 8 hours ago

      Sheez, I can't believe I have to explain that Shatner shows Promise as antidote for high cholesterol too.

      • selimthegrim 5 hours ago

        He just played New Orleans. Somebody should’ve been throwing tubs of Promise margarine at the stage.

narrator 10 hours ago

[flagged]

  • skadamou 6 hours ago

    Methylene blue is actually used to treat acquired cases of a similar condition called methemeglobinemia which is when the iron in heme is oxide from Fe2+ to Fe3+ [1]. This is different from carbon monoxide poisoning which is caused by carbon monoxide binding more tightly to hemoglobin than oxygen preventing oxygen from effectively getting into your blood.

    [1] https://www.uptodate.com/contents/methemoglobinemia?search=m...

    • Herodotus38 5 hours ago

      Ahh I bet that is where the confusion is. I am a physician and I have used methylene blue in severe shock and methemoglobinemia but I was a bit worried the parent comment believed it’s a valid CO treatment.

    • kazinator 5 hours ago

      Initially suspecting that since CO poisoning and methemeglobinemia are not the same, methylene blue might not work in CO cases, I did about three seconds of web searching and found a 1933 paper about an experiment (on animals) showing methylene blue to be effective in CO poisoning.

  • Herodotus38 8 hours ago

    Hello, I would be interested if you could give evidence that methylene blue "works great" for carbon monoxide poisoning in humans.

    It is not the standard of care in any guidelines I can find from any country. There is a paper from 2018 out of china showing some benefit in a rat model: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bcpt.12940

  • gus_massa 9 hours ago

    IANAMD I made a quick search and the evidence of methylene blue as a carbon monoxide antidote looks controversial.

    IIUC part of the effect is oxidizing/reducing the iron atom in the hemoglobin, and that changes how strong is the bound with the O2, CO, NO. But my chemistry is not enough to give a good guess of the results.

  • majkinetor 10 hours ago

    God forbid we have alternatives that work in minutes

    • lagniappe 8 hours ago

      Given that MB is commonly supported by those with right leaning politics, if the above is true, it won't be reported on for risk of appearing to support the "wrong" party.

      • darth_avocado 7 hours ago

        Why would a treatment be not made available if it’s effective? What’s the conspiracy in letting people suffer and die?

        • immibis 2 hours ago

          Well, money would be the most obvious one, but the parent comment is talking about the anti-science regime currently in power in the USA. I can't remember which, but I thought I read they banned some effective treatments because RFK Jr (famous conspiracy theorist now in charge of the country's health) didn't believe in them. They shut down research into mRNA medicines. at least, because they think it's population control to keep you docile, or something like that. There was also a mass shooting at a CDC office on similar grounds.

      • jayd16 7 hours ago

        It's been around for a century but it's a political conspiracy to keep it unknown??

      • Traubenfuchs 8 hours ago

        [flagged]

        • jrajav 7 hours ago

          "hey, speeding down the highway 35mph over the limit could kill you, especially if you are fat and old. you SHOULD drive under the speed limit, but you don't have to."

          No, the point is that it could kill other people. Speed all you want when you're on your own private roads.

          Laws are generally meant to ensure public safety and the ability for us to live and cooperate together with mutual trust. They usually do end up restricting your personal freedoms to that end. Deal with it.