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Title: Introduction to Toxicology


1
Introduction to Toxicology
Larry Johnson Partnership for Environmental
Educationand Rural health (PEER) Texas A M
University
2
Toxicology
  • What is toxicology? The study of the effects of
    poisons.
  • Poisonous substances are produced by plants,
    animals, or bacteria.
  • Phytotoxins
  • Zootoxins
  • Bacteriotoxins
  • Toxicant - the specific poisonous chemical.
  • Xenobiotic - man-made substance and/or produced
    by but not normally found in the body.

3
Introduction
  • Toxicology is arguably the oldest scientific
    discipline, as the earliest humans had to
    recognize which plants were safe to eat.
  • Most exposure of humans to chemicals is via
    naturally occurring compounds consumed from food
    plants.
  • Humans are exposed to chemicals both
    inadvertently and deliberately.

4
You Know ?
  • 92 of all poisonings happen at home.
  • The household products implicated in most
    poisonings are cleaning solutions, fuels,
    medicines, and other materials such as glue and
    cosmetics.
  • Certain animals secrete a xenobiotic poison
    called venom, usually injected with a bite or a
    sting, and others animals harbor infectious
    bacteria.
  • Some household plants are poisonous to humans and
    animals.

5
History
  • 2700 B.C. - Chinese journals plant and
  • fish poisons
  • 1900-1200
    B.C. - Egyptian documents that had
    directions for collection, preparation,
    and administration of more than 800 medicinal
    and poisonous recipes.
  • 800 B.C. - India - Hindu medicine includes
  • notes on poisons and antidotes.
  • 50-100 A.D. - Greek physicians classified over
  • 600 plant, animal, and mineral poisons.

6
History
  • 50- 400 A.D. - Romans used poisons for
  • executions and assassinations.
  • The philosopher, Socrates, was executed
    using hemlock for teaching radical
  • ideas to youths.
  • Avicenna (A.D. 980-1036) Islamic authority on
    poisons and antidotes.
  • 1200 A.D. - Spanish rabbi Maimonides writes
  • first-aid book for poisonings,
  • Poisons and Their Antidotes

7
History
  • Swiss physician Paracelsus (1493-1541) credited
    with being
  • the father of modern toxicology.
  • All substances are poisons there is none which
    is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a
    poison from a remedy.

8
The Dose Makes the Poison
An apparently nontoxic chemical can be toxic at
high doses. (Too much of a good thing can be
bad). Highly toxic chemicals can be life saving
when given in appropriate doses. (Poisons are not
harmful at a sufficiently low dose).
9
Lethal Doses
Source Marczewski, A.E., and Kamrin, M.
Toxicology for the citizen, Retrieved August 17,
2000 from the World Wide Web www.iet.msu.edu/toxc
oncepts/toxconcepts.htm.
10
HistoryItalian physician Ramazzini (1713)
publishedDe Morbis Artificum (Diseases of
Workers)
describing "asthma" in bakers, miners,
farmers, gilders, tinsmiths, glass-workers,
tanners, millers, grain-sifters, stonecutters,
ragmen, runners, riders, porters, and professors.
Ramazzini outlined health hazards of the dusts,
fumes, or gases that such workers inhaled. The
bakers and horse riders described by Ramazzini
would today probably be diagnosed as suffering
from allergen-induced asthma. The lung diseases
suffered by most of the other workers would now
be classified as "pneumoconiosis," a group of
dust-related chronic diseases.
11
History
Spanish physician Orfila (1815)
established toxicology as a distinct scientific
discipline.
12
History
  • 20th Century
  • Paul Ehrlich developed staining procedures to
    observe cell and tissues and pioneered the
    understanding of how toxicants influence living
    organisms.

13
History
20th Century Rachel Carson - alarmed
public about dangers of pesticides
in the environment.
14
Occupational and Environmental Toxicology
  • Environmental toxicants (air
  • and water pollutants) are
  • substances harmful to the
  • environment and to humans.
  • Environmental toxicants are both natural and
  • man made.
  • Public perception that man-made ones are more
    serious than natural ones - Reality both
  • are serious.
  • 5,000,000 yearly deaths worldwide due
  • to bacterial toxicants (Salmonella, E. coli)

15
Occupational and Environmental Toxicology
  • Many examples of diseases associated with
    specific occupations were recorded in antiquity,
    but they were not considered serious because the
    health of the workers was not a societal concern.
  • - Paracelsus - Miners Disease (1533)
  • - Hill Pott (1761 1775)
  • - Radium dial painters, aniline dye workers
    (1900)
  • - Shoe salesmen (1950s)
  • - Industrial chemical workers (1940-present)

16
Occupational and Environmental Toxicology
  • - Paracelsus - Miners Disease (1533)
    came from inhaling metal vapors,
    foundation for the field of chemotherapy.
  • - Hill (1761) linked tobacco (snuff)
    to cancer.
  • - Pott (1775) linked scrotal
    cancer
  • and soot (benzo(a)pyrene) in
  • chimney sweeps.

17
Occupational and Environmental Toxicology
  • Radium dial painters,
  • aniline dye workers (1900)
  • painters licked their brushes
  • to pull it to a point.
  • Shoe salesmen (1950s)
  • shoe-fitting fluoroscopes
  • radiation of feet in shoes of children and
    repeated
  • exposure for salesmen.

18
Occupational and Environmental Toxicology
  • Industrial chemical workers
  • (1940-present)
  • Workers typically are exposed to
  • a greater number of carcinogens
  • for longer periods of time.
  • Occupations with high risk of cancer
  • Health care workers, pharmaceutical and
    laboratory workers, refinery workers, rubber
    workers, furniture makers, and pesticide workers.

19
Modern Toxicology
  • 1961 - Society of Toxicology
  • 1970s - EPA, FDA, and NIOSH

20
Toxicology Terms
Toxicity - The adverse effects that a
chemical may produce. Dose
- The amount of a chemical that
gains access to the body.
21
Toxicology Terms
Exposure Contact providing
opportunity of obtaining a
poisonous dose. Hazard
The likelihood that the
toxicity will be expressed.
22
Threshold Effects for Dose
Dose-ResponseRelationships
Is there such a thing as a safe dose??
Agent A
Agent B
Response
NOEL(No Observable Effect Level)
Dose
23
Fundamental Rules of Toxicology
  • Exposure must first occur for the chemical to
    present a risk.
  • The magnitude of risk is proportional to both
    the potency of the chemical and the extent of
    exposure.
  • The dose makes the poison (amount of chemical
    at the target site determines toxicity).

24
Exposure Concepts
  • Different toxic responses may arise from
    different
  • Routes of exposure.
  • Frequencies of exposure.
  • Duration of exposure (acute vs. chronic).

25
Routes of Environmental Exposure
Ingestion (water and food) Absorption (through
skin) Injection (bite, puncture, or
cut) Inhalation (air)


26
Chemicals, Chemicals Everywhere
  • Everything in the environment is made of
    chemicals. Both naturally occurring and
    synthetic substances are chemical in nature.
  • People are exposed to chemicals by eating
    or swallowing them,breathing them, or
    absorbing them through the skin or mucosa.
  • People can protect themselves by
    blocking these routes of exposure.

27
Duration Frequency of Exposure
  • Duration and frequency are also important
    components of exposure and contribute to dose.
  • Acute exposure - less than 24 hours usually
    entails a single exposure
  • Repeated exposures are classified as
  • Subacute - repeated for up to 30 days
  • Subchronic - repeated for 30-90 days
  • Chronic -repeated for over 90 days

28
Exposure Concepts
  • Exposure to chemicals may come from many sources
  • Environmental
  • Occupational
  • Therapeutic
  • Dietary
  • Accidental
  • Deliberate

29
Children Poisons
30
Individual Responses Can Be Different
  • The variety of responses among organisms that get
    the same dose of chemical is due to individual
    susceptibility.
  • Dose and individual susceptibility play roles in
    all situations involving chemicals, including
    those making medicine and caffeine.

31
Introduction to Xenobiotics
  • Recall Foreign chemicals are
    synthesized within the body are termed
    xenobiotics (Gr.Xenos meaning strange)
  • Xenobiotics may be naturally occurring chemicals
    produced by plants, microorganisms, or
    animals(including humans).
  • Xenobiotics may also be synthetic chemicals
    produced by humans.

Poisons are xenobiotics, but not all xenobiotics
are poisonous.
32
How Does the Body Prevent the Actions of
Xenobiotics ?
1) Redistribution 2) Excretion (primarily
water soluble compounds) - kidney and liver 3)
Metabolism the major mechanism for terminating
xenobiotic activity, and is frequently the single
most important determinant of the duration and
intensity of toxic responses to a xenobiotic. -
LIVER, kidney, lung, GI, and others
Note 1) and 2) are highly dependent upon 3)
33
Xenobiotics at Work
TOXICOKINETICS
Xenobiotic
Excretion
34
General Scheme of Xenobiotic Metabolism
Lipophilic Hydrophilic(parent
compound) (metabolite)
Metabolism
  1. Decrease biological activity2) Increase
    excretability

Phase I Phase II(oxidative)
(synthetic)
Metabolites
Metabolites
sizeionizationwater solubility Increase
excretability
polarityfunctionality
BioactivationDetoxification
Detoxification
35
How Xenobiotics Cause Toxicity
  • Some xenobiotics cause toxicity by disrupting
    normal cell functions
  • Bind and damage proteins (structural, enzymes)
  • Bind and damage DNA (mutations)
  • Bind and damage lipids
  • React in the cell with oxygen to form
  • free radicals which damage lipid, protein,
  • and DNA

36
Types of Toxic Effects
  • Death - arsenic, cyanide
  • Organ Damage - ozone, lead
  • Mutagenesis - UV light
  • Carcinogenesis - benzene, asbestos
  • Teratogenesis - thalidomide

37
Target Organ Toxicity
  • Central Nervous System lead
  • Immune System - isocyanates
  • Liver - ethanol, acetaminophen
  • Respiratory Tract - tobacco smoke,
    asbestos, ozone
  • Eye - UV light (sunlight)
  • Kidney - metals
  • Skin - UV light, gold, nickel
  • Reproductive System
  • dibromochloropropane

38
Mechanistic Toxicology
  • How do chemicals cause their toxic effects?

39
What Do Toxicologists Do?
  • Most toxicologists work to develop a mechanistic
    understanding of how chemicals affect living
    systems
  • Develop safer chemical products
  • Develop safer drugs
  • Determine risks for chemical exposures
  • Develop treatments for chemical
  • exposures
  • Teach ( e.g. other toxicologists,
  • graduate students, and youth)

40
What Do Toxicologists Do?
  • Mechanistic toxicologists study how a chemical
  • causes toxic effects by investigating its
    absorption,
  • distribution, and excretion. They often work in
  • academic settings or private industries and
    develop
  • antidotes.
  • Descriptive toxicologists evaluate the toxicity
    of drugs, foods, and other products. They often
    perform experiments in a pharmaceutical or
    academic setting.
  • Clinical toxicologists usually are physicians or
  • veterinarians interested in the prevention,
    diagnosis,
  • and treatment of poisoning cases. They have
    specialized training in emergency medicine and
    poison management.

41
What Do Toxicologists Do?
  • Forensic toxicologists study the
    application of toxicology to the law. They
    uses chemical analysis to determine the
    cause and circumstances of death in a
    postmortem investigation.
  • Environmental toxicologists study the
  • effects of pollutants on organisms,
    populations, ecosystems, and the
    biosphere.
  • Regulatory toxicologists use scientific
    data to decide how to protect humans and
    animals from excessive risk. Government
    bureaus such as the FDA and EPA employ this
    type of toxicologist.

?
42
Regulatory Toxicology
  • Use data from descriptive and mechanistic
    toxicology to perform risk assessments.
  • Concerned with meeting requirements of
  • regulatory agencies.
  • Industry/government interactions.

43
Review
  • Toxicology is the science that studies the
    harmful effects of overexposure to drugs,
    environmental contaminants, and naturally
    occurring substances found in food, water, air,
    and soil.
  • Main objectives are to establish safe doses and
    determine mechanisms of biologic action of
    chemical substances.
  • A career in toxicology involves evaluating the
    harmful effects and mechanisms of action of
    chemicals in people, other animals, and all other
    living things in the environment.
  • This work may be carried out in government,
    private industry and consulting firms, or
    universities and other research settings.
  • Toxicologists routinely use many sophisticated
    tools to determine how chemicals are harmful.
  • (e.g.) computer simulations, computer chips,
    molecular biology, cultured cells, and
    genetically-engineered laboratory animals .

44
What Is the Risk?
  • People can make some choices about chemical
    exposure however, some exposure is controlled at
    a level other than an individual one. Collective
    groups of people, such as communities and
    governments, seek to control chemical exposure on
    a community or global level.

45
Animals in Research Virtually every medical
achievement of the last century has depended
directly or indirectly on research in
animals. U.S. Public Health Service
46
Summary
  • Toxicology is a fascinating science that
  • makes biology and chemistry interesting
  • and relevant.
  • Understanding HOW (i.e. mechanism)
  • something produces a toxic effect can lead to
    new ways of preventing or treating
    chemically-related diseases. Animal use in
    research is essential for medical progress.
  • Many diseases are the result of an interaction
    between our genetics (individual variability) and
    chemicals in our environment.
  • Toxicology provides an interesting and exciting
    way to apply science to important problems of
    social, environmental, and public health
    significance.

47
National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences
Texas Rural Systemic Initiative
The Center for Environmental and Rural Health
Partnership for Environmental Education and Rural
Health
College of Education, Texas AM University
College of Veterinary Medicine at Texas AM
University
48
Port-Mortem Toxicology
49
PM Toxicology
  • Following death there can be rapid changes in
    cellular biochemistry as autolysis proceeds, and
    drugs and other poisons may be released from
    their binding sites in tissues and major organs,
    also unabsorbed drug may diffuse from the
    stomach.
  • Special care should always be taken in the
    selection of blood and tissue sampling site(s),
    the method of collection of samples, and the
    labelling of sample containers. There is
    substantial published evidence to show that for
    most drugs and poisons, including alcohol, there
    are important differences in their concentration
    in blood according to the time of specimen
    collection after death, choice of sampling site,
    method of sampling and volume of blood collected
    (Pounder and Jones 1990 Pounder 1993).

50
PM Toxicology
  • It is common to observe tenfold differences in
    the concentration of certain drugs and some
    chemical poisons in post-mortem blood taken from
    different sites. Specimens taken from "central"
    sites e.g. heart tend to give particularly "high"
    values for most analytes. Moreover, certain
    commonly used "peripheral" sites such as
    subclavian, may sometimes give results closer to
    "central" sites such as the heart.
  • The most consistent quantitative findings are
    obtained in blood taken from the femoral vein,
    which is the recommended site of specimen
    collection. It is also possible to observe
    differences in the concentration of certain drugs
    obtained from different tissue sampling sites for
    liver and lung.

51
PM Toxicology
  • Parts of the body extracted and tested for
    toxicology, post-mortem
  • Blood and urine
  • Bile from the duodenum and/ or liver
  • Entire liver in some cases
  • Stomach contents and the entire stomach may be
    extracted
  • Liquid from the Vitreus Humour (eye)
  • Part of the brain and lungs may be extracted and
    tested
  • Hair, fingernails, and sometimes bone
  • Refer to http//www.toxlab.co.uk/postmort.htm for
    more information about why each element is
    extracted

52
PM Toxicology
  • Factors that prevent accurate manner of death due
    to toxins or drugs
  • Persons weight and metabolism
  • How long the person was dead
  • Where sample was extracted from body post mortem
  • Differing expert testimonials
  • In the case of drugs, deceaseds addiction level
    and tolerance to suspected drug

53
Forensic Toxicology
54
Forensic Toxicology
  • Definition
  • The science of detecting and identifying the
    presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids,
    tissues, and organs.

55
Forensic Toxicology
  • The role of the forensic toxicologist is limited
    to matters that pertain to violations of criminal
    law
  • Variability in in who conducts toxicology service
    in the U.S.
  • Crime lab staff member, government health
    agencies, private lab facilities
  • Whatever facility is doing the testing, the
    prevailing popularity of the drug will determine
    the types of cases the toxicologist will see

56
Role of the Toxicologist
  • Must identify one of thousands of drugs and
    poisons
  • Must find nanogram to microgram quantities
    dissipated throughout the entire body
  • Not always looking for exact chemicals, but
    metabolites of desired chemicals (ex. heroin ?
    morphine within seconds)

57
The Role of The Toxicologist
  • Once the forensic toxicologist ventures outside
    the analysis of alcohols the methods for analysis
    become more complex
  • Determining if the victim died from drugs can be
    a daunting task, especially if they have only the
    body and or organs and know external clues
  • No symptoms
  • Examination of personal effects

58
The Role of The Toxicologist
  • With out any indicating evidence the toxicologist
    is forced to start with general screening
    procedures in hopes of narrowing the thousand
    possibilities
  • Note that the concentration levels once processed
    by the body may vary dramatically from that of
    the non-induced form
  • In order to detect these traces a toxicologist
    must understand how the drug metabolizes
  • Transforming a chemical in the body to another
    chemical for the purpose of facilitating its
    elimination from the body

59
Establishing Toxicity
  • Once the obstacle of detecting the drug is
    overcome, the toxicologist must then determine
    the toxicity of the drug
  • With a deceased person many tests can be run on
    various organs to determine the precise
    concentrations
  • Living subjects are more difficult, due to the
    limited samples (blood and urine)

60
Techniques Used in Toxicology
  • The three most widely used drug screening tests
    are
  • Thin-layer chromatography
  • Gas chromatography
  • Immunoassay
  • Confirmation tests is usually Gas Chromatography
    coupled with Mass Spectrometry

61
Immunoassay
  • The primary advantage of immunoassay is its
    ability to detect small concentrations of drugs
    in body fluids and organs
  • This techniques is based on antigen-antibody
    recognition
  • Essentially the drug is coupled with a protein
    carrier and then injected into an animal
  • This antigen stimulates antibodies in the animal
  • The blood serum recovered from the animal now
    contains antibodies that are specific for the drug

62
DRE
  • The role of the toxicologist is based on
    knowledge,
  • Once the drug is detected determining the effects
    on the body must be done considering a number of
    variables
  • Age, tolerance, metabolism
  • Multiple drug, synergistic effect
  • Before the medical examiner can determine the
    cause of death he or she must rely on the
    interpretation of the toxicologist

63
Toxicology Procedures
  • 10mL of blood in airtight container
  • Add anticoagulant
  • Add preservative
  • 2 consecutive urine samples
  • Some drugs take a while to show up in urine (1-3
    days)
  • Vitreous humor
  • Hair samples

64
Toxicology Procedures
  • Screening-
  • quick test to narrow down possibilities
  • color tests, TLC, GC, immunoassay
  • Confirmation-
  • determines exact identity
  • GC/Mass Spec

Note TLCthin layer chromatography
65
Color Tests
  • Marquis Test
  • Turns purple in the presence of Heroin, morphine,
    opium
  • Turns orange-brown in presence of Amphetamines
  • Scott Test Three solutions (cobalt thiocyanate)
  • Blue then pink then back to blue in the presence
    of Cocaine
  • Duquenois-Levine
  • Test for marijuana turns purple
  • Cobalt Acetate/ isopropylamine test
  • Barbiburatesturns red-violet
  • P-Dimethlyamino-benzaldehyde (p-DMAB)
  • LSDturns blue

66
More Analytical Tests
  • Microcrystalline Tests Identifies drug by using
    chemicals that reacts to produce characteristic
    crystals
  • Chromatography TLC, HPLC and gas separate
    drugs/tentative ID
  • Mass Spectrometry chemical fingerprint no two
    drugs fragment the same

67
DRE
  • Drug Recognition Experts are trained and
    developed for standardization in procedures
  • The process is designed so that each individual
    is tested in the same fashion
  • It is a twelve step process and evaluates for 7
    categories of drugs
  • Central nervous system depressants
  • Central nervous system stimulants
  • Hallucinogens
  • Phencyclidine
  • Inhalants
  • Narcotic Analgesics
  • Cannabis

68
Why?
  • Think of all the people that you have heard do
    drugs.
  • US drug manufacturers produce enough barbiturates
    and tranquilizers each year to give every person
    in the US 40 pills
  • (thats about 12 billion pills)
  • 18,000 out of 44,000 annual traffic deaths are
    alcohol related and send over 2 million people to
    the hospital

69
Toxicology of Alcohol
70
Toxicology of Alcohol The fate of alcohol in the
body
  • Alcohol is the most readily consumed drug among
    our society
  • It use coupled with automobiles have dictated the
    need for reliable indicators of consumption
  • Must be on evasive, reliable, meet the demands of
    legal system
  • Absorption is highly variable and dependant on a
    number of factors

71
The fate of alcohol in the body
  • The detection of alcohol, for determining an
    individuals impairment, focuses on the
    concentration of alcohol in the blood
  • Blood alcohol levels show a direct relationship
    to the proportion of alcohol in the brain
  • Alcohol is readily transferred into the
    circulatory system minutes after it has been
    consumed

72
The fate of alcohol in the body
  • Factors affecting rate of absorption
  • Weight - the higher your weight, the lower your
    Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) will be
  • Gender - Men produce more of the enzyme that
    breaks down alcohol
  • Food - the more food you eat, especially protein,
    before you drink, the lower your Blood Alcohol
    Content (BAC) will be
  • Emotional state - Alcohol is a depressant and
    will enhance your current emotional state. For
    example, if you are upset before you start
    drinking at the end of the night your mood will
    be lower than it was at the beginning of the
    evening
  • Drinking Rate - Chugging drinks and doing shots
    results in a large amount of alcohol entering
    your body in a short amount of time. Your body
    cannot process alcohol at a fast pace resulting
    in a higher BAC.

73
Elimination of Alcohol from the Body
  • Once alcohol begins to circulate in the
    bloodstream the body begins the task of removing
    it, this is done in two ways
  • 1) Oxidation The combination of oxygen with
    other substances to produce new products.
  • Nearly all alcohol consumed is eventually
    oxidized to carbon dioxide and water
  • Takes place in the liver, facilitated by the
    enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase
  • Alcohol alcohol dehydrogenase acetaldhyde,
    then to acetic acid

74
Elimination of Alcohol from the Body
  • The second means by which the remaining alcohol
    is eliminated from the body is
  • 2) Excretion Elimination of alcohol from the
    body in unchanged state is excreted in breath
    and urine, also perspiration.
  • Alcohol exhaled by the breath is in direct
    proportion to the amount in the blood

75
The fate of alcohol in the body
  • The fate of alcohol in the body is relatively
    simple
  • Absorption into the blood stream,
  • Distribution throughout the bodys water,
  • And finally elimination by oxidation and excretion

76
Alcohol in the Lungs
  • It is in the lungs that the respiratory system
    bridges with the circulatory system
  • Exchange of Carbon dioxide for oxygen takes
    place, at the Alveoli
  • If while this exchange is taken place, alcohol or
    any other volatile substance, happens to be in
    the blood, it too will pass into the alveoli

77
Alcohol in the Lungs
  • Henrys Law
  • When a volatile chemical (alcohol) is dissolved
    in a liquid (blood) and is brought to equilibrium
    with air (alveolar breath) there is a fixed ratio
    between the concentration of the volatile
    compound (alcohol) and in air (alveolar breath)
    and its concentration in the liquid (blood)
  • This ratio is a constant for a given temperatures

78
Alcohol in the Lungs
  • The temperature at which breath leaves the mouth
    is normally 34 degrees Celsius
  • At this temperature, experimental evidence has
    shown that the ratio of alcohol in the blood to
    alcohol in alveoli air is approximately
  • 2,100 to 1
  • 1 ml of blood will contain nearly the same amount
    of alcohol as 2,100 ml of alveoli breath

79
Parts of the brain affected by Alcohol
  • Alcohol 1st affects the forebrain and moves
    backward
  • Last affected is medulla oblongata

80
Blood and Lungs
  • Prior to completion of absorption the blood
    concentration will be greater in the arteries
    than the veins
  • Due to diffusion of alcohol into the tissues
  • Breath tests reflect measurements in the
    pulmonary arteries
  • During absorption phase breath test may be higher
    than the blood test, taken from venous blood of
    arm
  • Once absorption is complete blood and breath
    should be of minimal difference

81
Alcohol and the Law
  • 1939-1964 intoxicated 0.15 BAC
  • 1965 intoxicated 0.10 BAC
  • 2003 intoxicated 0.08 BAC

At least we dont live in France, Germany,
Ireland, or Japan (0.05) or especially Sweden
(0.02)!
82
Alcohol and the Law
  • Try the drink wheel http//www.intox.com/wheel/dr
    inkwheel.asp

83
Alcohol Detection
84
Field Sobriety Testing
  • Two reasons for the field sobriety test
  • Used as a preliminary test to ascertain the
    degree of the suspects physical impairment
  • To see whether or not an evidential test is
    justified.

85
Field Sobriety Testing Methods
  • Field sobriety testing consists of a series of
    psychophysical tests and a preliminary breath
    test (typically done with a handheld fuel cell
    tester)
  • These tests are preliminary and nonevidential in
    naturethey only serve to establish probable
    cause requiring a more thorough breath or blood
    test.

86
Field Sobriety Tests
  • Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus
  • Involuntary eye jerk as eye moves horizontally
  • Walk and Turn (divided attention tasks)
  • One-Leg Stand

87
Infrared Technology
  • Since the mid-1980s, infrared (IR) technology has
    been the primary means of breath alcohol testing
    in the United States.
  • Current technology uses infrared measurement
    systems that are made more specific for alcohol
    by using several optical filters.
  • You determine breath alcohol levels by passing a
    narrow band of IR light, selected for its
    absorption by alcohol, through one side of a
    breath sample chamber.
  • By detecting emergent light on the other side,
    you can measure alcohol concentration by using
    the well-known Lambert-Beers law, which defines
    the relationship between concentration and IR
    absorption.
  • A major advantage of this technology is its
    ability to make real-time measurements.

88
Infrared Technology
  • One disadvantage of using IR technology is the
    high cost of achieving specificity and accuracy
    at low breath alcohol concentration levels.
  • Also, the IR detector's output is nonlinear with
    respect to alcohol concentration and must be
    corrected by measurement circuits.
  • Because of IR technology's expense, mechanical
    components, and other limitations, breath alcohol
    instrumentation manufacturers began a search for
    an alternative.
  • One technology, electrochemical cells, also known
    as fuel cells, seemed to offer significant
    advantages.

89
Fuel Cell technology
  • In the early 1800's a British scientist
    discovered the fuel cell effect.
  • He immersed two platinum electrodes in sulfuric
    acid electrolyte and supplied hydrogen at one
    electrode and oxygen at the other.
  • The resulting reaction created a current flow
    between the electrodes.
  • There was no practical application of fuel cells
    at that time because of high cost and
    technological problems.
  • In the 1960s, researchers at the University of
    Vienna demonstrated a fuel cell that was specific
    for alcohol.
  • This evolved into the present-day cell used in
    all fuel cell-based breath alcohol measurement
    instruments.

90
Fuel Cell Technology
  • In its simplest form, the alcohol fuel cell
    consists of a porous, chemically inert layer
    coated on both sides with finely divided platinum
    (called platinum black).
  • The manufacturer impregnates the porous layer
    with an acidic electrolyte solution, and applies
    platinum wire electrical connections to the
    platinum black surfaces.

91
Fuel Cell Technology
  • The manufacturer mounts the entire assembly in a
    plastic case, which also includes a gas inlet
    that allows a breath sample to be introduced.
  • Various manufacturers employ numerous proprietary
    nuances in their construction.

92
Fuel Cell Technology
  • The reaction that takes place in an alcohol fuel
    cell is alcohol oxidation.
  • In this chemical reaction a fixed number of 
    electrons are freed per molecule of alcohol.
  • The oxidation occurs on the upper surface of the
    fuel cell.

93
Fuel Cell Technology
  • The freed H ions migrate to the lower surface of
    the cell, where they combine with atmospheric
    oxygen to form water, consuming one electron per
    H ion in the process.
  • Thus, the upper surface has an excess of
    electrons, and the lower surface has a
    corresponding deficiency of electrons.

94
Fuel Cell Technology
  • If you connect the two surfaces electrically, a
    current flows through this external circuit to
    neutralize the charge.
  • This current is a direct indication of the amount
    of alcohol consumed by the fuel cell.
  • With appropriate signal processing, you can
    display breath alcohol concentrations directly
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