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The Alcohol Breath Test
by Michael P. Hlastala, Ph.D.
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine
Box 356522
University of Washington
Seattle, WA 98195-6522
Over the years, breath testing has become
a widely
used method for quantitative determination of the
level of intoxication of individuals suspected of
driving while under the influence of alcohol. After
recognition of the need for quantitative assessment
of intoxication, blood alcohol concentration was
considered as the single most important variable.
However concern about the invasiveness requirements
of drawing a blood sample led to the development of
the breath test as a non-invasive means of assessing
level of intoxication. The breath test is an indirect
test, but has been considered to be a good estimate
of the blood alcohol concentration because of the
assumption that an end-exhaled breath sample
accurately reflects the alveolar (or deep-lung) air
which is in equilibrium with the blood. In spite of
the great deal of effort that has gone into the
studies attempting to validate the breath test,
forensic scientists and toxicologists still have a
very limited understanding of the breath alcohol test
and its limitations.
Anatomy of the Lungs
The lungs are located within
the chest. This organ allows inspired air to come
into close proximity with the blood so gases (such as
oxygen and carbon dioxide) can exchange between the
air and the blood. The lung is made up of over 300
million small air sacs called alveoli. Outside air
comes to the alveoli from the mouth or nose via the
airways. The major airway leading to the lungs from
the throat is the trachea. The trachea divides into
the left and right "mainstem bronchi"
(going to the
left and right lungs) which divide further into the
"lobar bronchi". This division goes on about 23 times
until the alveoli are reached. Actually, some alveoli
begin to appear at about the 17th generation airways.
Surrounding each alveolus are small blood vessels.
The thinness (less than 0.001 millimeter) of the
membrane separating blood from the air in the lungs
allows oxygen and carbon dioxide to exchange readily
between the blood and air. Because of the large
number of very small alveoli, there is a very large
surface area (70 square meters) for this gas
exchange process.
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Bias In The Breath Alcohol Test
The initial intent of the legislature was to provide a
law that could make it much easier to prosecute by taking
away the possibility of defense arguments concerning the
variability between BrAC and BAC. In
fact, the passage of the "breath per se" law has made it
much more difficult for prosecution by virtue of a lack of
definition of breath. In fact the average BrAC is actually
much lower than any breath
alcohol test machine reading. In effect, the legislature
has dealt a blow to the prosecution because it is now
impossible for the prosecution to prove that the average
BrAC is greater than or equal to a given standard, whether
it is 0.08 gm/210 L or 0.10 gm/210L.
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Scientific Revolution
The evolution of scientific understanding depends on the continuous
development of new ideas that form the bases for experimentation. This
concept has been termed "scientific revolution" by Kuhn, who sees
science as the shift from one paradigm to another. The term,
"paradigm"
refers to a set of universally recognized scientific achievements that
for a time provide a model or conceptual framework for a phenomenon. This
paradigm represents the core principles that define the scientific understanding.
A paradigm is established after a number of initial observations are obtained.
Experiments are then carried out to test hypotheses related to the paradigm.
Usually, these experiments provide data that reinforce the paradigm.
Occasionally, these experiments result in
anomalies,
or results that do not fit within the framework of the original paradigm,
and are inconsistent with the predictions of the paradigm. The accumulation
of anomalies leads the scientist to develop a
new paradigm
which provides a new framework for interpreting experimental results which
accounts for the anomalies of the old paradigm as well as new observations.
At that point, the new paradigm undergoes scrutiny through newly suggested
experiments that provide data to reinforce the new paradigm. The new paradigm
must account for the new observations as well as the prior observations. The
transition from the old paradigm anomalies to the new paradigm always encounters
enormous resistance to change. This resistance is crucial for this scientific
progress to occur. Eventually, it is likely that another set of anomalies
with the new paradigm will lead to yet a third paradigm. This will occur
as new technologies reveal new anomalies. Kuhn, a physicist turned philosopher,
cites a number of paradigms that have evolved in his field in the form of
scientific revolutions: Copernican astronomy, Newtonian physics, the wave
theory of light, and quantum physics. These same ideas apply to different
fields in very different scales. The concept of the paradigm can also be
applied to the Alcohol Breath Test.
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The Old Paradigm
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Figure 3. Assumed exhaled
alcohol profile in the 1950's. |
Development of the single breath test for alcohol took place in the early 1950's when the field
of respiratory physiology was just beginning. At that
time, it was generally understood that the first air
exhaled from the lungs contained air from the airways
and had little "alveolar air". It was thought that
further exhalation would result in exhalation of air
from the alveoli containing gas in equilibrium with
pulmonary capillary blood. These concepts were held
in the respiratory physiology community and followed
from data obtained with low solubility gases, such as
nitrogen. Without the advantage of having present-day
analytical equipment, the profile of exhaled alcohol
could not be measured, but was expected to be
identical to nitrogen (after a single breath of
oxygen) and to appear as shown in Figure 3. The first
part of the exhaled air was thought to come from the
airways and was called the anatomic dead space and
the later part of the exhaled air (with higher gas
concentration) was thought to come from the alveolar
regions. This later part of the exhaled gas profile
was termed the alveolar plateau. With a presumed flat
exhaled alcohol profile, it was thought that
end-exhaled alcohol concentration would be
independent of exhaled volume after exhalation beyond
anatomic dead space volume. It was further assumed
that alveolar alcohol concentration was precisely
related to the arterial blood alcohol concentration
by virtue of the physical-chemical relationship known
as the partition coefficient. The implicit assumption
was that the alcohol concentration remained unchanged
as alveolar air passed through the airways. Viewed
through the limited perspective of respiratory
physiology of the 1940's, the breath
alcohol test
seemed to be reasonable in principle and further
development as a non-invasive measure of blood
alcohol concentration was justifiable.
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