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Effects of stomach content on the breath alcohol concentration‐transdermal alcohol concentration relationship
Author(s) -
Saldich Emily B.,
Wang Chunming,
Rosen I. Gary,
Bartroff Jay,
Luczak Susan E.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
drug and alcohol review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.018
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1465-3362
pISSN - 0959-5236
DOI - 10.1111/dar.13267
Subject(s) - stomach , alcohol , meal , ethanol , alcohol content , serving size , medicine , poison control , affect (linguistics) , zoology , food science , chemistry , environmental health , psychology , biochemistry , biology , communication
Wearable devices that obtain transdermal alcohol concentration (TAC) could become valuable research tools for monitoring alcohol consumption levels in naturalistic environments if the TAC they produce could be converted into quantitatively‐meaningful estimates of breath alcohol concentration (eBrAC). Our team has developed mathematical models to produce eBrAC from TAC, but it is not yet clear how a variety of factors affect the accuracy of the models. Stomach content is one factor that is known to affect breath alcohol concentration (BrAC), but its effect on the BrAC‐TAC relationship has not yet been studied. Methods We examine the BrAC‐TAC relationship by having two investigators participate in four laboratory drinking sessions with varied stomach content conditions: (i) no meal, (ii) half and (iii) full meal before drinking, and (iv) full meal after drinking. BrAC and TAC were obtained every 10 min over the BrAC curve. Results Eating before drinking lowered BrAC and TAC levels, with greater variability in TAC across person‐device pairings, but the BrAC‐TAC relationship was not consistently altered by stomach content. The mathematical model calibration parameters, fit indices, and eBrAC curves and summary score outputs did not consistently vary based on stomach content, indicating that our models were able to produce eBrAC from TAC with similar accuracy despite variations in the shape and magnitude of the BrAC curves under different conditions. Discussion and Conclusions This study represents the first examination of how stomach content affects our ability to model estimates of BrAC from TAC and indicates it is not a major factor.