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breath testing| Collecting a breath sample and analysing it. Breath testing is useful in medicine to diagnose certain conditions. It is also used by the police to measure alcohol consumption (see Breathalyzer). |
| Many breath tests require the patient to consume a substance before the test, so that the breakdown products of this substance can be checked for. Abnormal quantities of the breakdown product indicate disease. For example, before a breath test to diagnose malabsorption syndrome (a condition characterized by severe chronic diarrhoea caused by the small intestine failing to absorb food efficiently) the patient must eat a dose of xylose, a sugar normally completely absorbed in the intestine. Large amounts of hydrogen in the breath within the next few hours reveal the disease is present. |
| Specific breath tests have been developed for a variety of diseases, including, in 2007, for lung cancer. |
History Since the time of Hippocrates doctors have been aware that the odour of a patient's breath can aid diagnosis; for example the breath of a person with kidney failure smells similar to urine, and an undiagnosed diabetic's breath has a fruity odour. |
| In 1784 Antoine Lavoisier and Pierre Simon Laplace analysed the breath of a guinea pig, to reveal that it consumed oxygen and expired carbon dioxide. |
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