JOURNAL ARTICLE

Exhaled human breath measurement method for assessing exposure to halogenated volatile organic compounds

Joachim D. PleilAndrew B. Lindstrom

Year: 1997 Journal:   Clinical Chemistry Vol: 43 (5)Pages: 723-730   Publisher: American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Abstract

Abstract The organic constituents of exhaled human breath are representative of blood-borne concentrations through gas exchange in the blood/breath interface in the lungs. The presence of specific compounds can be an indicator of recent exposure or represent a biological response of the subject. For volatile organic compounds (VOCs), sampling and analysis of breath is preferred to direct measurement from blood samples because breath collection is noninvasive, potentially infectious waste is avoided, and the measurement of gas-phase analytes is much simpler in a gas matrix rather than in a complex biological tissue such as blood. To exploit these advantages, we have developed the “single breath canister” (SBC) technique, a simple direct collection method for individual alveolar breath samples, and adapted conventional gas chromatography–mass spectrometry analytical methods for trace-concentration VOC analysis. The focus of this paper is to describe briefly the techniques for making VOC measurements in breath, to present some specific applications for which these methods are relevant, and to demonstrate how to estimate exposure to example VOCs on the basis of breath elimination. We present data from three different exposure scenarios: (a) vinyl chloride and cis-1,2-dichloroethene from showering with contaminated water from a private well, (b) chloroform and bromodichloromethane from high-intensity swimming in chlorinated pool water, and (c) trichloroethene from a controlled exposure chamber experiment. In all cases, for all subjects, the experiment is the same: preexposure breath measurement, exposure to halogenated VOC, and a postexposure time-dependent series of breath measurements. Data are presented only to demonstrate the use of the method and how to interpret the analytical results.

Keywords:
Breath gas analysis Chemistry Environmental chemistry Volatile organic compound Chromatography Gas chromatography Analyte Tetrachloroethylene Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry Mass spectrometry Trichloroethylene Organic chemistry

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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Chemical Sensor Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Insect Pheromone Research and Control
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Insect Science
Indoor Air Quality and Microbial Exposure
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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