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Chemiluminescent Measurement of Hydrogen Peroxide in the Exhaled Breath Condensate of Healthy and Asthmatic Adults.

Miguel E QuimbarSteven Q DavisSherif T Al-FarraAmanda HayesValentina JovicMaximillian MasudaAlexander Ryan Lippert
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2020)
Reactive oxygen species are centrally involved in the pathophysiology of airway diseases such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. This study reports the development of a chemiluminescence assay and a device for measuring hydrogen peroxide in the exhaled breath condensate of asthma patients and healthy participants. A stand-alone photon detection device was constructed for use with an optimized chemiluminescence assay. Calibrations using a catalase control to scavenge residual hydrogen peroxide in calibrant solutions provided analytically sensitive and specific measurements. We evaluated exhaled breath condensate hydrogen peroxide in 60 patients (ages 20-83; 30 healthy patients and 30 asthma patients) recruited from the John Peter Smith Hospital Network. The exhaled breath condensate hydrogen peroxide concentrations trended toward higher values in asthma patients compared to healthy participants (mean 142.5 vs 115.5 nM; p = 0.32). Asthma patients who had not used an albuterol rescue inhaler in the past week were compared to those who had and showed a trend toward higher hydrogen peroxide levels (mean 172.8 vs 115.9 nM; p = 0.25), and these patients also trended toward higher hydrogen peroxide than healthy participants (mean 172.8 vs 115.5 nM; p = 0.14). This pilot study demonstrates the ability of the newly developed assay and device to measure exhaled breath condensate hydrogen peroxide in asthma patients and healthy participants. The trends observed in this study are in agreement with previous literature and warrant further investigation of using this system to measure exhaled breath condensate hydrogen peroxide for monitoring oxidative stress in asthma.
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