Extending PTR based breath analysis to real-time monitoring of reactive volatile organic compounds

Reactive exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs) such as nitrogen- and sulfur-containing substances may be related to diseases, metabolic processes and bacterial activity. As these compounds may interact with any surface of the analytical system, time-resolved monitoring and reliable quantificatio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inAnalyst (London) Vol. 144; no. 24; pp. 7359 - 7367
Main Authors Pugliese, Giovanni, Trefz, Phillip, Brock, Beate, Schubert, Jochen K, Miekisch, Wolfram
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Royal Society of Chemistry 02.12.2019
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Reactive exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs) such as nitrogen- and sulfur-containing substances may be related to diseases, metabolic processes and bacterial activity. As these compounds may interact with any surface of the analytical system, time-resolved monitoring and reliable quantification is difficult. We describe a proton transfer reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometry (PTR-ToF-MS) based analytical method for direct breath-resolved monitoring of reactive compounds. Aliphatic amines were used as test substances. Matrix adapted gas standards were generated by means of a liquid calibration unit. Calibration conditions were adapted in terms of materials, temperature and equilibration time. PTR-ToF-MS conditions were optimized in terms of inlet materials, transfer line and drift tube temperature and drift tube reduced electric field ( E / N ). Optimized PTR conditions in combination with inert materials and high temperatures considerably reduced the interactions of compounds with the surfaces of the analytical system. Good linearity ( R 2 > 0.99, RSDs < 5%) with LODs between 0.15 ppbV and 1.23 ppbV and LOQs between 0.24 ppbV and 1.94 ppbV could be achieved. The method was then applied to breath-resolved monitoring of reactive compounds in 17 healthy subjects after high and low oral protein challenge. Exhaled concentrations of trimethylamine, indole, methanethiol, dimethylsulfide, acetone, 2-propanol, 2-butanone and phenol showed significant changes after protein intake. Methanethiol concentrations increased 6-fold within minutes after the protein intake. Optimization of methods and instrument design enabled reliable breath-resolved PTR-MS based analysis of exhaled reactive VOCs in the sub-ppbV range. Continuous in vivo monitoring of exhaled amines and sulphur containing compounds may provide novel non-invasive insight into endogenous and gut bacteria driven protein metabolism. Direct time resolved mass spectrometric monitoring of reactive exhaled nitrogen- and sulfur-containing volatile organic compounds (VOCs) related to metabolic processes, diseases and bacterial activity.
Bibliography:10.1039/c9an01478k
Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 14
content type line 23
ISSN:0003-2654
1364-5528
1364-5528
DOI:10.1039/c9an01478k