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Identifiction of IBD using an electronic ‘e’ nose. Arasaradnam RP 1,2 , Ouaret N 3 , Nwokolo C 1 , Bardhan KD 4 , Covington JA 3 1University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire & 2Clinical Sciences Research Institute, Medical School, University of Warwick
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Identifiction of IBD using an electronic ‘e’ nose Arasaradnam RP1,2, Ouaret N3, Nwokolo C1, Bardhan KD4, Covington JA3 1University Hospital Coventry & Warwickshire & 2Clinical Sciences Research Institute, Medical School, University of Warwick 3School of Engineering, University of Warwick, 4Rotherham NHS Trust 10th BROAD Meeting – February 2012 1
The Senses 5 Senses by Aristotle • Sight • Hearing • Smell • Taste • Touch But also… • Nociception (pain) • Equilibrioception (balance) • Proprioception & kinesthesia (joint motion and acceleration) • Sense of time • Thermoception (temperature differences) • Magnetoception (direction)
‘Smell’ @ Warwick • First research group dedicated to the sense of smell • First company making artificial olfaction instruments • First commercial products manufactured here… • Long history of smell research… Life in ‘Smell’ Persaud & Dodd Nature 1982
Human olfactory system Axel & Buck Nobel Prize 2004
How does it work? Array of sensors with different broad sensitivity e.g. Alcohols Operate by measuring change in resistance/capacitance/frequency e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- e- If a different compound had caused the air to change, the output pattern will be different: Each sensor changes its resistance by a different amount, making a pattern of the change Measurement of baseline resistance
Electronic noses Food and cosmetics Gas emissions and Manufacturing processes Applications of Electronic nose Environmental pollutants Medical applications Homeland security
Sampling • Disease alters gut flora -altered fermentation patterns which alters the composition of gases emitted from urine • Urine headspace measured using an electronic nose and FAIMS (field asymmetric ion mobility spectrometry) • Novel method – non invasive • Possible faster and earlier detection of IBD
Methods • 48 patients and 14 volunteers; n = 62 • UC (n=20; active n=4), CD (n=20; active n=4) and 14 controls • Urine analysis with ‘e’ nose and FAIMS • Analysis was by Principal Component Analysis (PCA) – not pre-classified and LDA (Linear Discriminant Analysis) (pre-classified) E - nose
Warwick Electronic Nose Filtered air is passed over sample (1 L/min), capturing gas/vapours emanating from the sample Sample air is passed over sensors (300 secs) followed by clean air (300 secs) 10 ml of sample, placed in a sterilin bottle & heated to 40 oC
Separation of IBD with ‘E’ nose Arasaradnam et al JMET 2011
Can we detect IBD by measuring Volatile organic compounds/ gasses? Arasaradnam et al 2010
FAIMS – Field Asymetric Ion Mobility Spectrometry • Simple fast analysis of vapours and gases • Detects chemicals in complex mixtures • Identifies by mobility (ion movement through an electric field) • Mobility determined by molecule size and mass • Chemicals identified and separated • Can train to identify anomalies • Creates a chemical fingerprint
FAIMS Covington et al 2011
What are we detecting? Summary of chemical peaks in volunteers and Crohns and UC patients HA=hydrogen azide (HN3); AA=acetic acid (CH3COOH); PG=propylene glycol (C3H6(OH)2); A=aldehydes; K=ketones; OA=organic acids.
Summary • Potential alternate diagnosis method • Able to distinguish between control and IBD patient groups • Can also identify specific disease groups ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s • Greatest difference is shown between diseased and non-diseased • FAIMS can also be used to identify diseased groups and supports e nose data
Acknowledgements: BROAD Foundation Thank you - Questions the future.......?