Experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a Chinese population after a light meal.

In forensic science, the Widmark equation is widely used to deduce the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) at different time points. But the linear model specified by Widmark might be deficient in predicting the breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) at different time points, and extrapolating the peak a...

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Main Authors: Y C Li, N N Sze, S C Wong, K L Tsui, F L So
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221237
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spelling doaj-05d46dd5e28c442393d22bf0b74e25db2021-03-03T21:07:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01149e022123710.1371/journal.pone.0221237Experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a Chinese population after a light meal.Y C LiN N SzeS C WongK L TsuiF L SoIn forensic science, the Widmark equation is widely used to deduce the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) at different time points. But the linear model specified by Widmark might be deficient in predicting the breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) at different time points, and extrapolating the peak and the corresponding time. In order to establish the temporal profile of alcohol concentration which captures the effects of non-linear nature of alcohol absorption, elimination, and peak, in particular of Chinese population after a light meal, a drinking experiment was conducted in this study. To achieve this, a double-blind drinking experiment was conducted to measure the BrAC of 52 Chinese participants after a light meal in this study. Prior to the experiment, all participants were required to abstain from food for 4 hours, more importantly, from alcohol and sedatives for 24 hours. A standard light meal was provided about 30 minutes prior to the alcohol intake in the experiment. The BrAC was measured at a 10-minute interval during the absorption phase and 30-minute interval during the elimination phase respectively. The measurements were stopped when the BrAC fell to 0.010 mg/100 ml or below, or more than 8 hours after the alcohol intake. Then, the temporal profiles of BrAC, assuming linear and non-linear relationships, were established using Full Bayesian approach. The linear component indicated the alcohol impairment in normal social function, with which a light meal is usually accompanied with drinking. On the other hand, the non-linear (gamma distribution) part replicated the absorption phase, elimination phase, and the peak of alcohol concentration. The proposed model well performed than the conventional regression model. Additionally, the confounding factors including gender, body weight, and dosage were controlled for. Results should be useful for the development of cost-effective enforcement measures that could deter against drink driving.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221237
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Y C Li
N N Sze
S C Wong
K L Tsui
F L So
spellingShingle Y C Li
N N Sze
S C Wong
K L Tsui
F L So
Experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a Chinese population after a light meal.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Y C Li
N N Sze
S C Wong
K L Tsui
F L So
author_sort Y C Li
title Experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a Chinese population after a light meal.
title_short Experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a Chinese population after a light meal.
title_full Experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a Chinese population after a light meal.
title_fullStr Experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a Chinese population after a light meal.
title_full_unstemmed Experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a Chinese population after a light meal.
title_sort experimental study of the temporal profile of breath alcohol concentration in a chinese population after a light meal.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description In forensic science, the Widmark equation is widely used to deduce the blood alcohol concentration (BAC) at different time points. But the linear model specified by Widmark might be deficient in predicting the breath alcohol concentration (BrAC) at different time points, and extrapolating the peak and the corresponding time. In order to establish the temporal profile of alcohol concentration which captures the effects of non-linear nature of alcohol absorption, elimination, and peak, in particular of Chinese population after a light meal, a drinking experiment was conducted in this study. To achieve this, a double-blind drinking experiment was conducted to measure the BrAC of 52 Chinese participants after a light meal in this study. Prior to the experiment, all participants were required to abstain from food for 4 hours, more importantly, from alcohol and sedatives for 24 hours. A standard light meal was provided about 30 minutes prior to the alcohol intake in the experiment. The BrAC was measured at a 10-minute interval during the absorption phase and 30-minute interval during the elimination phase respectively. The measurements were stopped when the BrAC fell to 0.010 mg/100 ml or below, or more than 8 hours after the alcohol intake. Then, the temporal profiles of BrAC, assuming linear and non-linear relationships, were established using Full Bayesian approach. The linear component indicated the alcohol impairment in normal social function, with which a light meal is usually accompanied with drinking. On the other hand, the non-linear (gamma distribution) part replicated the absorption phase, elimination phase, and the peak of alcohol concentration. The proposed model well performed than the conventional regression model. Additionally, the confounding factors including gender, body weight, and dosage were controlled for. Results should be useful for the development of cost-effective enforcement measures that could deter against drink driving.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0221237
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