The influence of active and passive air humidification on exhaled breath condensate volume

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The influence of active and passive air humidification on exhaled breath condensate volume. / Hjembæk-Brandt, Jeppe; Hindborg, Mathias; Jensen, Andreas K.; Dalby Sørensen, Christian Ari; Rasmussen, Bodil Steen; Maltesen, Raluca Georgiana; Bestle, Morten Heiberg.

In: ERJ Open Research, Vol. 6, No. 4, 2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hjembæk-Brandt, J, Hindborg, M, Jensen, AK, Dalby Sørensen, CA, Rasmussen, BS, Maltesen, RG & Bestle, MH 2020, 'The influence of active and passive air humidification on exhaled breath condensate volume', ERJ Open Research, vol. 6, no. 4. https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00009-2020

APA

Hjembæk-Brandt, J., Hindborg, M., Jensen, A. K., Dalby Sørensen, C. A., Rasmussen, B. S., Maltesen, R. G., & Bestle, M. H. (2020). The influence of active and passive air humidification on exhaled breath condensate volume. ERJ Open Research, 6(4). https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00009-2020

Vancouver

Hjembæk-Brandt J, Hindborg M, Jensen AK, Dalby Sørensen CA, Rasmussen BS, Maltesen RG et al. The influence of active and passive air humidification on exhaled breath condensate volume. ERJ Open Research. 2020;6(4). https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00009-2020

Author

Hjembæk-Brandt, Jeppe ; Hindborg, Mathias ; Jensen, Andreas K. ; Dalby Sørensen, Christian Ari ; Rasmussen, Bodil Steen ; Maltesen, Raluca Georgiana ; Bestle, Morten Heiberg. / The influence of active and passive air humidification on exhaled breath condensate volume. In: ERJ Open Research. 2020 ; Vol. 6, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{aec4b7401a954ef4903a2d66cfa9ead9,
title = "The influence of active and passive air humidification on exhaled breath condensate volume",
abstract = "Exhaled breath condensate (EBC) is safely collected in mechanically ventilated (MV) patients, but there are no guidelines regarding humidification of inhaled air during EBC collection. We investigated the influence of active and passive air humidification on EBC volumes obtained from MV patients.We collected 29 EBC samples from 21 critically ill MV patients with one condition of active humidification and four different conditions of non-humidification; 19 samples from 19 surgical MV patients with passive humidification and two samples from artificial lungs MV with active humidification. The main outcome was the obtained EBC volume per 100 L exhaled air.When collected with different conditions of non-humidification, mean [95 EBC volumes did not differ significantly (1.35 [1.23; 1.46] versus 1.16 [1.05; 1.28] versus 1.27 [1.13; 1.41] versus 1.17 [1.00; 1.33] mL/100 L, p=0.114). EBC volumes were higher with active humidification than with non-humidification (2.05 [1.91; 2.19] versus 1.25 [1.17; 1.32] mL/100 L, plt;0.001). The volume difference between these corresponded to the EBC volume obtained from artificial lungs (0.81 [0.62; 0.99] versus 0.89 mL/100 L, p=0.287). EBC volumes were lower for surgical MV patients with passive humidification compared to critically ill MV patients with non-humidification (0.55 [0.47; 0.63] versus 1.25 [1.17; 1.32] mL/100 L, plt;0.001).While active humidification increases EBC volumes, passive humidification decreases EBC volumes and possibly influences EBC composition by other mechanisms. We propose that EBC should be collected from MV patients without air humidification to improve reproducibility and comparability across studies, and that humidification conditions should always be reported.When collected from mechanically ventilated (MV) patients, the volume of exhaled breath condensate (EBC) is influenced by both active and passive air humidification. EBC should be obtained from MV patients without air humidification if possible. https://bit.ly/2WC5G7B",
author = "Jeppe Hjemb{\ae}k-Brandt and Mathias Hindborg and Jensen, {Andreas K.} and {Dalby S{\o}rensen}, {Christian Ari} and Rasmussen, {Bodil Steen} and Maltesen, {Raluca Georgiana} and Bestle, {Morten Heiberg}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1183/23120541.00009-2020",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "ERJ Open Research",
issn = "2312-0541",
publisher = "ERS publications",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The influence of active and passive air humidification on exhaled breath condensate volume

AU - Hjembæk-Brandt, Jeppe

AU - Hindborg, Mathias

AU - Jensen, Andreas K.

AU - Dalby Sørensen, Christian Ari

AU - Rasmussen, Bodil Steen

AU - Maltesen, Raluca Georgiana

AU - Bestle, Morten Heiberg

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Exhaled breath condensate (EBC) is safely collected in mechanically ventilated (MV) patients, but there are no guidelines regarding humidification of inhaled air during EBC collection. We investigated the influence of active and passive air humidification on EBC volumes obtained from MV patients.We collected 29 EBC samples from 21 critically ill MV patients with one condition of active humidification and four different conditions of non-humidification; 19 samples from 19 surgical MV patients with passive humidification and two samples from artificial lungs MV with active humidification. The main outcome was the obtained EBC volume per 100 L exhaled air.When collected with different conditions of non-humidification, mean [95 EBC volumes did not differ significantly (1.35 [1.23; 1.46] versus 1.16 [1.05; 1.28] versus 1.27 [1.13; 1.41] versus 1.17 [1.00; 1.33] mL/100 L, p=0.114). EBC volumes were higher with active humidification than with non-humidification (2.05 [1.91; 2.19] versus 1.25 [1.17; 1.32] mL/100 L, plt;0.001). The volume difference between these corresponded to the EBC volume obtained from artificial lungs (0.81 [0.62; 0.99] versus 0.89 mL/100 L, p=0.287). EBC volumes were lower for surgical MV patients with passive humidification compared to critically ill MV patients with non-humidification (0.55 [0.47; 0.63] versus 1.25 [1.17; 1.32] mL/100 L, plt;0.001).While active humidification increases EBC volumes, passive humidification decreases EBC volumes and possibly influences EBC composition by other mechanisms. We propose that EBC should be collected from MV patients without air humidification to improve reproducibility and comparability across studies, and that humidification conditions should always be reported.When collected from mechanically ventilated (MV) patients, the volume of exhaled breath condensate (EBC) is influenced by both active and passive air humidification. EBC should be obtained from MV patients without air humidification if possible. https://bit.ly/2WC5G7B

AB - Exhaled breath condensate (EBC) is safely collected in mechanically ventilated (MV) patients, but there are no guidelines regarding humidification of inhaled air during EBC collection. We investigated the influence of active and passive air humidification on EBC volumes obtained from MV patients.We collected 29 EBC samples from 21 critically ill MV patients with one condition of active humidification and four different conditions of non-humidification; 19 samples from 19 surgical MV patients with passive humidification and two samples from artificial lungs MV with active humidification. The main outcome was the obtained EBC volume per 100 L exhaled air.When collected with different conditions of non-humidification, mean [95 EBC volumes did not differ significantly (1.35 [1.23; 1.46] versus 1.16 [1.05; 1.28] versus 1.27 [1.13; 1.41] versus 1.17 [1.00; 1.33] mL/100 L, p=0.114). EBC volumes were higher with active humidification than with non-humidification (2.05 [1.91; 2.19] versus 1.25 [1.17; 1.32] mL/100 L, plt;0.001). The volume difference between these corresponded to the EBC volume obtained from artificial lungs (0.81 [0.62; 0.99] versus 0.89 mL/100 L, p=0.287). EBC volumes were lower for surgical MV patients with passive humidification compared to critically ill MV patients with non-humidification (0.55 [0.47; 0.63] versus 1.25 [1.17; 1.32] mL/100 L, plt;0.001).While active humidification increases EBC volumes, passive humidification decreases EBC volumes and possibly influences EBC composition by other mechanisms. We propose that EBC should be collected from MV patients without air humidification to improve reproducibility and comparability across studies, and that humidification conditions should always be reported.When collected from mechanically ventilated (MV) patients, the volume of exhaled breath condensate (EBC) is influenced by both active and passive air humidification. EBC should be obtained from MV patients without air humidification if possible. https://bit.ly/2WC5G7B

U2 - 10.1183/23120541.00009-2020

DO - 10.1183/23120541.00009-2020

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33123551

VL - 6

JO - ERJ Open Research

JF - ERJ Open Research

SN - 2312-0541

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 250227876