| Literature DB >> 34064214 |
Lukas Martin Müller-Wirtz1,2, Daniel Kiefer1, Sven Ruffing1, Timo Brausch1, Tobias Hüppe1,2, Daniel I Sessler2,3, Thomas Volk1,2, Tobias Fink1,2, Sascha Kreuer1,2, Felix Maurer1,2.
Abstract
Exhaled aliphatic aldehydes were proposed as non-invasive biomarkers to detect increased lipid peroxidation in various diseases. As a prelude to clinical application of the multicapillary column-ion mobility spectrometry for the evaluation of aldehyde exhalation, we, therefore: (1) identified the most abundant volatile aliphatic aldehydes originating from in vitro oxidation of various polyunsaturated fatty acids; (2) evaluated emittance of aldehydes from plastic parts of the breathing circuit; (3) conducted a pilot study for in vivo quantification of exhaled aldehydes in mechanically ventilated patients. Pentanal, hexanal, heptanal, and nonanal were quantifiable in the headspace of oxidizing polyunsaturated fatty acids, with pentanal and hexanal predominating. Plastic parts of the breathing circuit emitted hexanal, octanal, nonanal, and decanal, whereby nonanal and decanal were ubiquitous and pentanal or heptanal not being detected. Only pentanal was quantifiable in breath of mechanically ventilated surgical patients with a mean exhaled concentration of 13 ± 5 ppb. An explorative analysis suggested that pentanal exhalation is associated with mechanical power-a measure for the invasiveness of mechanical ventilation. In conclusion, exhaled pentanal is a promising non-invasive biomarker for lipid peroxidation inducing pathologies, and should be evaluated in future clinical studies, particularly for detection of lung injury.Entities:
Keywords: MCC–IMS; anesthesia; biomarker; breath analysis; lipid peroxidation; mechanical ventilation; pentanal; ventilator-induced lung injury; volatile aldehydes; volatile organic compounds
Year: 2021 PMID: 34064214 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26113089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411