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J Appl Physiol 106: 513-519, 2009. First published November 26, 2008; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.91148.2008
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Basal and induced NO formation in the pharyngo-oral tract influences estimates of alveolar NO levels

Andrei Malinovschi,1 Christer Janson,2,3 Lena Holm,1 Lennart Nordvall,2,4 and Kjell Alving4

1Department of Medical Cell Biology: Integrative Physiology, 2Asthma and Allergy Research Centre, 3Department of Medical Sciences: Respiratory Medicine and Allergology, and 4Department of Women's and Children's Health, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

Submitted 21 August 2008 ; accepted in final form 25 November 2008

The present study analyzed how models currently used to distinguish alveolar from bronchial contribution to exhaled nitric oxide (NO) are affected by manipulation of NO formation in the pharyngo-oral tract. Exhaled NO was measured at multiple flow rates in 15 healthy subjects in two experiments: 1) measurements at baseline and 5 min after chlorhexidine (CHX) mouthwash and 2) measurements at baseline, 60 min after ingestion of 10 mg NaNO3/kg body wt, and 5 min after CHX mouthwash. Alveolar NO concentration (CalvNO) and bronchial flux (J'awNO) were calculated by using the slope-intercept model with or without adjustment for trumpet shape of airways and axial diffusion (TMAD). Salivary nitrate and nitrite were measured in the second experiment. CalvNO [median (range)] was reduced from 1.16 ppb (0.77, 1.96) at baseline to 0.84 ppb (0.57, 1.48) 5 min after CHX mouthwash (P < 0.001). The TMAD-adjusted CalvNO value after CHX mouthwash was 0.50 ppb (0, 0.85). The nitrate load increased J'awNO from 32.2 nl/min (12.2, 60.3) to 57.1 nl/min (22.0, 119) in all subjects and CalvNO from 1.47 ppb (0.73, 1.95) to 1.87 ppb (10.85, 7.20) in subjects with high nitrate turnover (>10-fold increase of salivary nitrite after nitrate load). CHX mouthwash reduced CalvNO levels to 1.15 ppb (0.72, 2.07) in these subjects with high nitrate turnover. All these results remained consistent after TMAD adjustment. We conclude that estimated alveolar NO concentration is affected by pharyngo-oral tract production of NO in healthy subjects, with a decrease after CHX mouthwash. Moreover, unknown ingestion of dietary nitrate could significantly increase estimated alveolar NO in subjects with high nitrate turnover, and this might be falsely interpreted as a sign of peripheral inflammation. These findings were robust for TMAD.

exhaled nitric oxide; alveolar nitric oxide; salivary nitrite; breath test



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: A. Malinovschi, Dept. of Medical Cell Biology: Integrative Physiology, Uppsala Univ., Box 571, SE-751 23 Uppsala, Sweden (e-mail: andrei.malinovschi{at}medcellbiol.uu.se)




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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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