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by SketchySeaBeast 701 days ago
But if that's what they wanted to replicate they could use nitrogen, or carbon dioxide, or something else that isn't actively poisonous.
2 comments

Carbon dioxide is actively poisonous.

But anyway, that requires doing the exercise inside the controlled atmosphere. I'd guess the lure of carbon monoxide is that you can breath it, go out and exercise on a normal atmosphere. (That is, if you don't die on the first step.)

But then, if I had to guess I'd say the fact that the effects are long-term would reduce the athlete's performance. So yeah, I'd guess wrong.

You're right, carbon dioxide in large enough doses is no bueno, but even then it's more likely an issue of asphyxiation than anything else, and it's really a matter of scale. Carbon dioxide exist at ~400 ppm and safe at 5,000 ppm over 8 hours, compared to 50 ppm for carbon monoxide[1]. I know which one I'd rather use to substitute some oxygen for.

I was just trying to point out that if they wanted to induce hypoxia, there's better gases to be inhaling.

[1] https://www.indsci.com/en/blog/carbon-monoxide-vs.-carbon-di...

They probably need something that has longer negative effects. They need something that is slightly poisonous.