Litcius/Paper detail

Screening Methanol Poisoning with a Portable Breath Detector

Jan van den Broek, Dario Bischof, Nina Derron, Sebastian Abegg, Philipp A. Gerber, Andreas T. Güntner, Sotiris E. Pratsinis

2020Analytical Chemistry34 citationsDOI

Abstract

Methanol poisoning outbreaks after consumption of adulterated alcohol frequently overwhelm health care facilities in developing countries. Here, we present how a recently developed low-cost and handheld breath detector can serve as a noninvasive and rapid diagnostic tool for methanol poisoning. The detector combines a separation column and a micromachined chemoresistive gas sensor fully integrated into a device that communicates wirelessly with a smartphone. The performance of the detector is validated with methanol-spiked breath of 20 volunteers (105 breath samples) after consumption of alcoholic beverages. Breath methanol concentrations were quantified accurately within 2 min in the full breath-relevant range (10–1000 ppm) in excellent agreement (R2 = 0.966) with benchtop mass spectrometry. Bland–Altman analysis revealed sufficient limits of agreement (95% confidence intervals), promising to indicate reliably the clinical need for antidote and hemodialysis treatment. This simple-in-use detector features high diagnostic capability for accurate measurement of methanol in spiked breath, promising for rapid screening of methanol poisoning and assessment of severity. It can be applied readily by first responders to distinguish methanol from ethanol poisoning and monitor in real time the subsequent hospital treatment.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryMethanolChromatographyMethanol poisoningDetectorDetection limitComputer scienceOrganic chemistryTelecommunicationsAdvanced Chemical Sensor TechnologiesPoisoning and overdose treatmentsForensic Toxicology and Drug Analysis
Screening Methanol Poisoning with a Portable Breath Detector | Litcius