This study tested the hypothesis that carbon monoxide poisoning would
produce a deficit of attentional control, the supervisory attention
system, as indexed by attention switching and attentional scheduling,
and that routine attentional orienting would be unaffected.
Seventy-three cases of carbon monoxide poisoning were assessed at 3
days and 1 month post poisoning on tasks of attentional orienting, and
tasks of the supervisory attention system. The results were compared to
a group of 53 healthy community participants. A deficit of the
supervisory attentional system was documented on a task of attention
switching in survivors of both deliberate and accidental CO poisoning,
leaving attentional scheduling intact. There was no deficit of
attentional orienting in the current study. Alteration of consciousness
was found to predict subsequent supervisory attention system impairment
in correlation analyses, and the deficit was persistent for a 1 month
follow-up period. (JINS, 2004, 10, 843–850.)