| Literature DB >> 26854142 |
Thalakkotur Lazar Mathew1, Prabhahari Pownraj2, Sukhananazerin Abdulla3, Biji Pullithadathil4.
Abstract
This review elucidates the technologies in the field of exhaled breath analysis. Exhaled breath gas analysis offers an inexpensive, noninvasive and rapid method for detecting a large number of compounds under various conditions for health and disease states. There are various techniques to analyze some exhaled breath gases, including spectrometry, gas chromatography and spectroscopy. This review places emphasis on some of the critical biomarkers present in exhaled human breath, and its related effects. Additionally, various medical monitoring techniques used for breath analysis have been discussed. It also includes the current scenario of breath analysis with nanotechnology-oriented techniques.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; breath analysis; metabolism; nanosensors; noninvasive techniques
Year: 2015 PMID: 26854142 PMCID: PMC4665550 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics5010027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Timeline of expired breath gas analysis, Reproduced with permission from [8]. Copyright 2011, SPIE.
Figure 2Respiratory system and its relation to breath. Adapted with permission from [15], copyright 2011, American Chemical Society.
Major compounds and its concentrations for healthy persons.
| Exhaled Breath | Concentration | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Nitrogen | 78.04% | [ |
| Oxygen | 16% | [ |
| Carbon dioxide | 4%–5% | [ |
| Hydrogen | 5% | [ |
| Carbon monoxide | 0–6 ppm | [ |
| Ammonia | 0.5 ppm–2 ppm | [ |
| Inert gases and VOCs: Acetone, Isoprene and Ethanol | 0.9% <1 ppm | [ |
| Hydrogen sulphide | 0–1.3 ppm | [ |
| Nitric oxide | 10 ppb–50 ppb | [ |
| Nitrous oxide | 1 ppb–20 ppb | [ |
| Carbonyl Sulphide | 0–10 ppb | [ |
| Ethane | 0–10 ppb | [ |
| Pentane | 0–10 ppb | [ |
| Methane | 2 ppm–10 ppm | [ |
| Relative Humidity: | ||
| 1. Oral Exhalation | 91%–96% | [ |
| 2. Nasal Exhalation | 82%–85% | [ |
| Temperature Range | Between 34 °C and 36 °C | [ |
Figure 3Ammonia and its metabolites.
Figure 4Decarboxylation of ketone bodies.
Figure 5Biochemical pathway of isoprene.
Biomarkers, sources and diseases.
| Biomarkers | Sources | Diseases |
|---|---|---|
| Ammonia | Protein Metabolism | kidney failure, cirrhosis or hepatitis, hepatic encephalopathy, peptic ulcers, halitosis and asthma |
| Acetone | Acetoacetate Decarboxylation | Diabetes, lung cancer, dietary fat losses, congestive heart failure, brain seizure |
| Isoprene | Mevalonate Metabolism | disorders in cholesterol metabolism such as hypercholesterolemia |
| Methane | Intestinal bacteria metabolism of carbohydrates | Intestinal problems, colonic fermentation |
| Hydrogen Sulphide | metabolism of | airway inflammation |
| Nitric Oxide | Nitric oxide Synthase | Asthma, acute lung injury, ARDS, inflammatory lung diseases, lung infection, lung cancer, rhinitis |
| Ethane | Peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids | Oxidative stress, vitamin E deficiency, breast cancer, active ulcerative colitis |
| Pentane | Peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids | Liver diseases, schizophrenia, breast cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, oxidative stress, acute myocardial infarction, asthma |
Figure 6Schematic representation of Gas Chromatography-Ion Mobility Spectroscopy (GC-IMS). Reproduced with permission from [18], copyright 2011, Taylor & Francis.
Figure 7Schematic representation of Proton Transfer Reaction-Mass Spectrometry (PTR-MS), Reproduced with permission from [18], copyright 2011, Taylor & Francis.
Figure 8Schematic representation of Selected Ion Flow Tube-Mass Spectrometry (SIFT-MS). Reproduced with permission from [18], copyright 2011, Taylor & Francis.
Figure 9Experimental set up for Laser Photoacoustic Spectroscopy (LPAS), Reproduced with permission from [125]. Copyright 2005, SPIE.
Techniques and its detection for various gases.
| Gases | Techniques | Concentration | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ammonia | PTR-MS | 90 ppt | [ |
| SIFT-MS | 10 ppb | [ | |
| GC-IMS | 4 ppt | [ | |
| Acetone | PTR-MS | 50 ppb | [ |
| 1.33 ± 0.19 ppm | [ | ||
| GC-MS | 0.049 ppb | [ | |
| Nitrogen Monoxide | Chemiluminescence | 200 ppb | [ |
| Isoprene | PTR-MS | 100 ppb | [ |
| SIFT-MS | 0–474 ppb | [ | |
| Methane | SIFT-MS | 0.2 ppm | [ |
| Ethanol | PTR-MS | 289.00 ± 67.47 | [ |
| SIFT-MS | 0–1663 ppb | [ |
Figure 10Sensors based on different nanomaterials. (A) Chemiresistors based on monolayer capped metal nanoparticles. (B) Chemiresistors based on single walled carbon nanotubes. (C) Chemiresistors based on conducting polymers. (D) Chemiresistor based on chemicapacitor based on metal oxide film. (E) Quartz microbalance with selective coating. (F) Calorimetric sensor. (G) Surface acoustic wave sensor. Reproduced with permission from [11]. Copyright 2013, Future Medicine.
Materials and its monitoring techniques in the field of breath analysis.
| Materials | Analytical Technology/Device | Gases | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold nanoparticles | GC-MS | VOCs | [ |
| MoO3 Nanosensor | Nanosensor device | Isoprene, CO2, NH3 | [ |
| Gold Nanoparticles | GC-MS | VOCs | [ |
| Si-doped WO3 Nanoparticle | Chemiresistor/PTR-MS | Acetone | [ |
| Tungsten trioxide (WO3) nanostructured probe | - | ethanol, methanol, isoprene, acetone | [ |
| Gold Nanoparticles and Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes | Chemiresistor | VOCs | [ |
| Functionalized gold nanoparticles | GC-MS | VOCs | [ |
| Thiol derivatized gold nanoparticles sensors | GC-MS | Acetone and Ethanol | [ |
| Nanomaterial-based (Au NP and Pt NP) sensor | GC-MS | VOCs | [ |
| Chitosan | Chemiresistor | Acetone | [ |
| Gold nanoparticles decorated polyaniline | Chemiresistor | VSCs | [ |
| In2O3 and Pt-In2O3 | Chemiresistor | Acetone | [ |
| PEDOT:PSS coated nanofibrous TiO2 | Chemiresistor | Nitric Oxide | [ |
| MoO3 | Chemiresistor | Ammonia | [ |
| H2SO4 solution | Chemiresistor | Ammonia | [ |
| MWCNTs | Chemiresistor | Sleep apnea | [ |
| Chemically functionalized carbon nanotubes | Chemiresistor | Nitric Oxide | [ |
| Hemitubes of Pt-WO3 | Chemiresistor | Acetone | [ |