| Literature DB >> 35051905 |
Denise Biagini1, Jonathan Fusi2, Annasilvia Vezzosi1, Paolo Oliveri3, Silvia Ghimenti1, Alessio Lenzi1, Pietro Salvo4, Simona Daniele5, Giorgia Scarfò2, Federico Vivaldi1, Andrea Bonini1, Claudia Martini5, Ferdinando Franzoni2, Fabio Di Francesco1, Tommaso Lomonaco1.
Abstract
The composition of exhaled breath derives from an intricate combination of normal and abnormal physiological processes that are modified by the consumption of food and beverages, circadian rhythms, bacterial infections, and genetics as well as exposure to xenobiotics. This complexity, which results wide intra- and inter-individual variability and is further influenced by sampling conditions, hinders the identification of specific biomarkers and makes it difficult to differentiate between pathological and nominally healthy subjects. The identification of a 'normal' breath composition and the relative influence of the aforementioned parameters would make breath analyses much faster for diagnostic applications. We thus compared, for the first time, the breath composition of age-matched volunteers following a vegan and a Mediterranean omnivorous diet in order to evaluate the impact of diet on breath composition. Mixed breath was collected from 38 nominally healthy volunteers who were asked to breathe into a 2 l handmade Nalophan bag. Exhalation flow rate and carbon dioxide values were monitored during breath sampling. An aliquot (100 ml) of breath was loaded into a sorbent tube (250 mg of Tenax GR, 60/80 mesh) before being analyzed by thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (TD-GC-MS). Breath profiling using TD-GC-MS analysis identified five compounds (methanol, 1-propanol, pentane, hexane, and hexanal), thus enabling differentiation between samples collected from the different group members. Principal component analysis showed a clear separation between groups, suggesting that breath analysis could be used to study the influence of dietary habits in the fields of nutrition and metabolism. Surprisingly, one Italian woman and her brother showed extremely low breath isoprene levels (about 5 pbv), despite their normal lipidic profile and respiratory data, such as flow rate and pCO2. Further investigations to reveal the reasons behind low isoprene levels in breath would help reveal the origin of isoprene in breath.Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean diet; breath analysis; isoprene; standardization; vegan diet
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35051905 DOI: 10.1088/1752-7163/ac4d41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Breath Res ISSN: 1752-7155 Impact factor: 3.262