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AuthorMaurya, Muni Raj
AuthorOnthath, Haseena
AuthorMorsy, Hagar
AuthorRiyaz, Najam-US-Sahar
AuthorIbrahim, Muna
AuthorAhmed, Alaa Elsafi
AuthorAbuznad, Raghad
AuthorAlruwaili, Aeshah
AuthorAlsaedi, Fatimatulzahraa
AuthorKasak, Peter
AuthorSadasivuni, Kishor Kumar
Available date2022-03-23T06:35:46Z
Publication Date2021
Publication NameHealthcare (Switzerland)
ResourceScopus
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9081055
CitationMaurya MR, Onthath H, Morsy H, Riyaz N-U-S, Ibrahim M, Ahmed AE, Abuznad R, Alruwaili A, Alsaedi F, Kasak P, Sadasivuni KK. Colorimetry-Based Detection of Nitric Oxide from Exhaled Breath for Quantification of Oxidative Stress in Human Body. Healthcare. 2021; 9(8):1055. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9081055
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/28569
AbstractMonitoring exhaled breath is a safe, noninvasive method for determining the health status of the human body. Most of the components in our exhaled breath can act as health biomarkers, and they help in providing information about various diseases. Nitric oxide (NO) is one such important biomarker in exhaled breath that indicates oxidative stress in our body. This work presents a simple and noninvasive quantitative analysis approach for detecting NO from exhaled breath. The sensing is based on the colorimetric assisted detection of NO by m-Cresol Purple, Bromophenol Blue, and Alizaringelb dye. The sensing performance of the dye was analyzed by ultraviolet?visible (UV?Vis) spectroscopy. The study covers various sampling conditions like the pH effect, temperature effect, concentration effect, and selective nature of the dye. The m-Cresol Purple dye exhibited a high sensitivity towards NO with a detection limit of ~0.082 ppm in the linear range of 0.002?0.5 ppm. Moreover, the dye apprehended a high degree of selectivity towards other biocompounds present in the breath, and no possible interfering cross-reaction from these species was observed. The dye offered a high sensitivity, selectivity, fast response, and stability, which benchmark its potential for NO sensing. Further, m-Cresol Purple dye is suitable for NO sensing from the exhaled breath and can assist in quantifying oxidative stress levels in the body for the possible detection of COVID-19.
SponsorAcknowledgments: This work was supported by the UREP grant #UREP27-044-3-016 from the Qatar National Research Fund (a member of Qatar Foundation). The statements made herein are solely the responsibility of the authors.
Languageen
PublisherMDPI AG
SubjectBiosensor
Colorimetry
Exhaled breath
M-Cresol Purple
Nitric oxide
TitleColorimetry-based detection of nitric oxide from exhaled breath for quantification of oxidative stress in human body
TypeArticle
Issue Number8
Volume Number9
dc.accessType Open Access


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