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Now here is the question.
We know that CO is a toxic substance if inhaled, But why ?
The explanation i heard said that haemoglobin gets attached easier to CO than O2 (note: the subscript option does not seem to work) , Is that right ? And why ?
I asked that question to my chemics teacher, he said that the mass of 1 mole of CO is less than the mass of 1 mole of O2 , therefore haemoglobin prefers to get attached to CO, but this does not really seem like a scientifical explanation to me (specially with word prefers in the middle).
Thanks in advance.
BTW, good nick name Monique
Edited for the spelling mistake noted by Jikx
We know that CO is a toxic substance if inhaled, But why ?
The explanation i heard said that haemoglobin gets attached easier to CO than O2 (note: the subscript option does not seem to work) , Is that right ? And why ?
I asked that question to my chemics teacher, he said that the mass of 1 mole of CO is less than the mass of 1 mole of O2 , therefore haemoglobin prefers to get attached to CO, but this does not really seem like a scientifical explanation to me (specially with word prefers in the middle).
Thanks in advance.
BTW, good nick name Monique
Edited for the spelling mistake noted by Jikx
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