Asthma
Inhalers Cause False Breathalyzer Results
Information
courtesy of Lawrence Taylor - DUIblog
If
you use asthma inhalers and are ever arrested for DUI, you should
perhaps think twice about taking a breath test.
Most
inhalers operate primarily by injecting a mist containing a substantial
quantity of alcohol into the lungs. As an example, one of the most
commonly used inhalers, Primatene Mist, contains 34 percent alcohol.
This alcohol does not pass into the blood stream, but remains in
the alveolar lining of the lungs -- from where it will be exhaled
into the breath machine.
The
problem is that "breathalyzers" are designed to assume
that the breath sample contains alcohol which has been swallowed
and then metabolized by the body before being diffused into the
lungs. As I mentioned in an earlier post ("Breathalyzers --
and Why They Don't Work"), they are further designed to assume
that there are 2100 units of alcohol in the blood for every unit
measured on the breath. So the breathalyzers computer mistakenly
multiplies the alcohol measured from the asthma inhaler 2100 times.
In other words, a very tiny amount of alcohol in the lungs from
the inhaler mist can have a very large effect on the machines
reading.
Just
to make things worse, scientists have found that some asthma inhalers
can cause high readings on breath machines due, apparently, to the
propellent gasses used in the aerosols, in particular, chlorofluorocarbons.
See "Using Asthma Inhalers Can Give False Positive Results
in Breath Tests", 324 British Medical Journal 756 (March, 2002).
As I mentioned in another earlier post ("Why Breathalyzers
Don't Measure Alcohol"), one of the many design defects in
breath machines is that they are non-specific -- that is, they will
falsely report thousands of different chemical compounds as being
alcohol.
|