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A Real-Time Method to Evaluate the Nasal Deposition and Clearance of Acetone in the Human Volunteer
Authors:Karla D. Thrall  Ronald E. Schwartz  Karl K. Weitz  Jolen J. Soelberg  Gary L. Foureman  James D. Prah
Affiliation:1. Biological Sciences Division, Battelle, Pacific Northwest Laboratory, Richland, Washington, USA;2. Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Richland, Washington, USA;3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Assessment, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA;4. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Human Studies Division, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA
Abstract:Nasal dosimetry models have become increasingly quantitative as insights into tissue deposition/clearance and computational fluid dynamics have become available. Validation of these models requires sufficient experimental data. However, investigations into respiratory deposition, particularly in human volunteers, have been historically limited due to methodological limitations. To overcome this, a method for evaluating the nasal wash-in, wash-out phenomena of a highly water-soluble compound in human volunteers was developed and characterized. This methodology was assessed using controlled human inhalation exposures to uniformly labeled [13 C]acetone at approximately 1 ppm concentration for 30 min under different breathing maneuvers (inhale nose/exhale nose; inhale nose/exhale mouth; inhale mouth/exhale nose). A small-diameter air-sampling probe inserted in the nasopharyngeal cavity of the volunteer was connected directly to an ion-trap mass spectrometer capable of sampling every 0.8 s. A second ion-trap mass spectrometer simultaneously sampled from the volunteer's exhaled breath stream via a breath-inlet device interface. Together, the two mass spectrometers provided real-time appraisal of the [13 C]acetone concentrations in the nasopharyngeal region and in the exhaled breath stream before, during, and after the different breathing maneuvers. The breathing cycle (depth and frequency) and heart rate were concurrently monitored throughout the exposure using a heart-rate monitor and a human plethysmograph to differentiate inhalation and exhalation. Graphical overlay of the plethysmography results with the mass spectrometer measurements show clear quantifiable differences in [13 C]acetone levels at the nasal probe as a function of breathing maneuvers. Breath-by-breath analyses of [13 C]acetone concentrations indicate that between 40 and 75% of the compound is absorbed upon inhalation and nearly all of that absorbed is released back into the breath stream during exhalation.
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