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Analysis of volatile organic compounds from deep airway in the lung through intubation sampling. | LitMetric

Analysis of volatile organic compounds from deep airway in the lung through intubation sampling.

Anal Bioanal Chem

Anhui Province Key Laboratory of Medical Physics and Technology, Institute of Health and Medical Technology, Hefei Institutes of Physical Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hefei, 230031, China.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs) can indicate disease but are often contaminated by food and bacteria from the mouth and nasal passages.
  • This study collected and analyzed deep airway exhalation using intubation to better identify true body metabolic VOCs, employing methods like proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS).
  • Results showed that certain VOCs (ethanol, methyl mercaptan, phenol) found in oral exhalation were at lower levels in deep airway samples, suggesting they likely originate from food and bacteria rather than metabolism, guiding future clinical research on VOCs.

Article Abstract

Exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs) have been widely applied for the study of disease biomarkers. Oral exhalation and nasal exhalation are two of the most common sampling methods. However, VOCs released from food residues and bacteria in the mouth or upper respiratory tract were also sampled and usually mistaken as that produced from body metabolism. In this study, exhalation from deep airway was first directly collected through intubation sampling and analyzed. The exhalation samples of 35 subjects were collected through a catheter, which was inserted into the trachea or bronchus through the mouth and upper respiratory tract. Then, the VOCs in these samples were detected by proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS). In addition, fast gas chromatography proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (FGC-PTR-MS) was used to further determine the VOCs with the same mass-to-charge ratios. The results showed that there was methanol, acetonitrile, ethanol, methyl mercaptan, acetone, isoprene, and phenol in the deep airway. Compared with that in oral exhalation, ethanol, methyl mercaptan, and phenol had lower concentrations. In detail, the median concentrations of ethanol, methyl mercaptan, and phenol were 7.3, 0.6, and 23.9 ppbv, while those in the oral exhalation were 80.0, 5.1, and 71.3 ppbv, respectively, which meant the three VOCs mainly originated from the food residues and bacteria in the mouth or upper respiratory tract, rather than body metabolism. The research results in our study can provide references for expiratory VOC research based on oral and nasal exhalation samplings, which are more feasible in clinical practice.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00216-022-04295-xDOI Listing

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