| Literature DB >> 20149989 |
J F Lock1, P Taheri, S Bauer, H-G Holzhütter, M Malinowski, P Neuhaus, M Stockmann.
Abstract
Non-invasive breath tests can serve as valuable diagnostic tools in medicine as they can determine particular enzymatic and metabolic functions in vivo. However, methodological pitfalls have limited the actual clinical application of those tests till today. A major challenge of non-invasive breath tests has remained the provision of individually reliable test results. To overcome these limitations, a better understanding of breath kinetics during non-invasive breaths tests is essential. This analysis compares the breath recovery of a (13)C-methacetin breath test with the actual serum kinetics of the substrate. It is shown, that breath and serum kinetics of the same test are significantly different over a period of 60 minutes. The recovery of the tracer (13)CO(2) in breath seems to be significantly delayed due to intermediate storage in the bicarbonate pool. This has to be taken into account for the application of non-invasive breath test protocols. Otherwise, breath tests might display bicarbonate kinetics despite the metabolic capacity of the particular target enzyme.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 20149989 PMCID: PMC3351941 DOI: 10.1186/2047-783x-14-12-547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Res ISSN: 0949-2321 Impact factor: 2.175
Figure 1General principle of non-invasive breath tests using . The close connection between breath test interpretation and in vivo metabolism is a essential precondition for the validity of a test.
Figure 2Algorithms of test interpretation in non-invasive breath tests for calculation of the enzymatic capacity. It is shown an exemplary plot of breath recovery (13CO2/12CO2 ratio) after administration of 2 mg/kg 13C-labeled methacetin. #1- Maximum of delta-over-baseline (DOB); #2DOB at 15 minutes; #3- DOB at 30 minutes; #4- DOB at 60 minutes; #5- Cumulative recovery by calculation of area under DOB curve.
Figure 3Breath recovery curve of . 13C-metha cetin was applied intravenously in a dosage of 2 and 4 mg/kg and breath recovery was analyzed for in total 60 minutes.
Figure 4Serum kinetics of .