Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: Development Of Breath Tests For Drugs

Medical News Today

Saturday 04 Feb 2006

-----
A series of preliminary studies into the detection of breath markers of
drugs is being undertaken at Keele University Medical School using a
revolutionary form of breath analysis (SIFT-MS) which has been invented
by Professor David Smith FRS and Professor Patrik Spanel from the
Institute of Science and Technology in Medicine (ISTM) at Keele. This
patient friendly non-invasive SIFT-MS technique allows the sampling of
single exhalations of breath in real time avoiding the collection of
breath samples into bags, which is required for other techniques and
which compromises the breath sample. Thus, SIFT-MS data is immediately
available to the clinician for rapid diagnosis. These novel instruments
are now manufactured by Trans Spectra Limited of which Professors Smith
and Spanel are co-founders and directors. They are now being used to
investigate several diseased states, including renal failure, diabetes

and cancer, using breath analysis.

The experiments on cannabis are part of a joint research project with Dr
Roger Bloor, Senior Lecturer in Addiction Psychiatry at Keele and the
ISTM team, including Dr. Tianshu Wang, and are part of the first stages
of a programme of research focusing on the development of a methodology
for the detection of drugs through breath sampling. Studies of two
drugs, Cannabis and Gamma Hydroxybutyric acid (GHB), have been the focus
of the current research.

The size of the molecules in Cannabis are beyond the range of the
current SIFT-MS detection system and this study explores identification
of smaller marker molecules which result from breaking down the large
molecules during the SIFT-MS analysis.

These results show that SIFT-MS is able to detect markers for cannabis
in both the air above drug samples and in the vapor and smoke produced
when cannabis is heated or burnt. The ability to detect markers of
cannabis use on the breath will depend on the how long these markers are
retained in breath following cannabis use. Cannabis has previously been
detected from breath samples of human subjects by gas
chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) up to twelve minutes after
smoking marijuana. Using chemical detection methods, cannabis has been
reported to be detectable on breath samples up to 2 hours after smoking
cannabis, but with many false positive results from a variety of other
substances.

The current project, which has been funded by the North Staffs Medical
Institute Research Grant and by the North Staffordshire Research and
Development Consortium, will continue by analysing the gases above the
urine of subjects smoking cannabis to attempt to identify additional
marker substances. Breath samples will then be obtained from subjects
using cannabis that will be analysed by SIFT-MS techniques.

Ethical approval has been granted by the Local Research Ethics Committee
for analysis of breath and urine samples from patients attending for
treatment of drug addiction. The cannabis samples used are held under a
Home Office Licence and have been supplied from seized drug samples
through cooperation with Staffordshire Police.

KEELE UNIVERSITY
Keele,
Staffordshire ,
ST5 5BG,
United Kingdom
http://www.keele.ac.uk

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!