Abstract

Online breath analysis is an attractive approach to track exhaled compounds without sample preparation. Current commercially available real-time breath analysis platforms require the purchase of a full mass spectrometer. Here we present an ion source compatible with virtually any preexisting atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometer that allows real-time analysis of breath. We illustrate the capabilities of such technological development by upgrading an orbitrap mass spectrometer. As a result, we detected compounds in exhaled breath between 70 and 900 Da, with a mass accuracy of typically <1 ppm; resolutions between m/Δm 22 000 and 70 000 and fragmentation capabilities. The setup was tested in a pilot study, comparing the breath of smokers (n = 9) and non-smokers (n = 10). Exogenous compounds associated to smoking, as well as endogenous metabolites suggesting increased oxidative stress in smokers, were detected and in some cases identified unambiguously. Most of these compounds correlated significantly with smoking frequency and allowed accurate discrimination of smokers and non-smokers.

Highlights

  • Exhaled breath contains valuable information about metabolic processes taking place within the human body

  • Since Pauling discovered more than 200 different compounds in exhaled breath using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) in the 1970s [8], interest in breath analysis has steadily grown

  • Apart from GC-MS, which is considered the workhorse in the field, several other techniques have evolved over the last decades to analyze breath, for example, electronic sensors, spectroscopic methods and ion mobility spectrometry [5]

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Summary

11 February 2016

Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI. Martin Thomas Gaugg1, Diego Garcia Gomez1, Cesar Barrios-Collado1,2, Guillermo Vidal-de-Miguel1,2, Malcolm Kohler3, Renato Zenobi1 and Pablo Martinez-Lozano Sinues1 Keywords: breath analysis, ionizer, mass spectrometry, real-time, heavy volatiles, high mass resolution

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