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| The
Myth of Breath Testing |
Many
people believe that breath testing is an accurate method of determining
the amount of alcohol in a person's blood. In fact, breath testing
is far from accurate and as currently used is fraught with error
which can lead to false high readings that are significantly higher
than a person's true blood alcohol content at the time of the test
or at the time of operation based upon a number of variables not
taken into account by the machine.
1.
Breath to Blood Partition Ratios
Breath
testing is based upon the principal that there is a direct relationship
between the amount of alcohol in a person's expired air sample and
the amount of alcohol in the person's blood. All breath testing
equipment currently used in the United States assumes this ratio
to be 2100 to 1. In other words; the amount of alcohol in one milliter
of our blood when consuming alcohol is 2100 times greater than the
amount of alcohol found in 1 cubic centimeter of our expired air
sample. According to the theory, if one took 2100 cubic centimeters
of our deep lung air and analyzed the amount of alcohol in that
sample, the amount of alcohol in that sample would be equal to the
amount of alcohol in one milliliter of our blood.
Consequently, the machines are calibrated on the assumption that
everyone has a 2100 to 1 ratio. However, not everyone has a 2100
breath to blood ratio. In fact, recent research shows this ratio
to vary from 990 to 1 to 3005 to 1. If a person has a ratio lower
than 2100 to 1 then the corresponding breath test result will be
artificially high. On the other hand, if a persons ratio is higher
than 2100 to 1, then a persons breath test sample will be artificially
low. For example, if a person took a breath test and produced a
.10 and had a breath to blood partition ratio of 1000 to 1, the
persons true blood alcohol content would be .05. Because the machine
does not have the capability to determine what a person's actual
ratio is, it has no way of detecting the error it has made. Moreover,
a person's breath to blood partition ratio varies from person to
person and even varies within the person over time, making it almost
impossible to classify the breath tests results as accurate.
In the absorptive phase, the average mean for a healthy white male
is 1776 to 1. Through the use of statistical analysis this translates
into 75% of the people submitting to the test being overestimated
and 25% being underestimated based upon this factor alone. The absorptive
phase can last up to 5 hours after a persons last drink on a full
stomach and 2 on an empty stomach.
On the other hand, if a person is in the post absorptive phase,
25% will be overestimated and 75% will be underestimated based upon
this factor alone. Current breath testing equipment assumes that
a person is in the post-absorptive phase when in fact many people
arrested for DWI are in the absorptive phase. Even the leading proponents
of breath testing concede that it is virtually impossible to determine
at which stage a person is in at the time of the test and therefore
impossible to determine whether or not the person is overestimated
or underestimated.
2. Breathing Technique
A
person's breathing technique (the way a person blows into a breath
testing machine) will effect the accuracy of the reading produced
on the machine. To produce a .10 on a Intoxilyzer 5000, the machine
actually detects less than 1 millionth of a fluid ounce of alcohol
in the breath sample. This amount is smaller than a pin head. If
a person blows into the machine for a long period over 10 seconds,
the resulting reading can be higher than the person's actual true
blood alcohol content by to 150%. In a recent lecture at Harvard
University, Dr. Michael Hlastala of the University of Washington
Department of Medicine confirmed that breathing technique can significantly
impact on a person's true BAC.
If a person holds their breath, or is a shallow breather, that can
cause the reading to be over 20% higher than the true BAC. Given
that the breathing pattern is not controlled, it is impossible to
determine whether or not a person's result on the breath test is
articifically high and to what degree.
3. Trace Contamination
Many
of today's breath testing equipment rely on infrared analysis to
determine how much alcohol is in a person's expired breath sample.
A major flaw in the analysis is that many of these instruments are
non-specific for alcohol. That is, they are not designed to detect
the molecule of ethyl alcohol, but rather only a part of that molecule
- the methyl group. These machines are based on the Baer-Lambert
theory which states that all organic substances absorb infrared
energy at different wave lengths. Alcohol absorbs at over 8 wave
lengths however, the great majority of the Intoxilyzer 5000's currently
being employed only test at two wave lengths 3.39 and 3.48 microns.
This creates a potential problem because there are several other
compounds or substances that absorb at these wave lengths that may
be present in a person's air sample. When these other substances
are present, the machines read them as being alcohol molecules when
in fact they are not. This can lead to a situation where a person
is charged with DWI based upon a breath test when in fact he has
no alcohol at all in his blood. One study conducted recently revealed
a case where a cabinet maker produced a reading of .24 when a simultaneous
blood test showed that he had no alcohol in his blood. The reading
was obviously attributable to the cabinet maker's inhalation of
chemicals contained in the paint he was applying which have a similar
chemical structure of alcohol.
If a person belches, or has false teeth, this can also produce false
high readings.
4. Temperature
The
temperature of the person's breath sample is also of importance.
If the temperature of a person's breath sample is 1 degree above
34 C, then the person's reading will be about 7% higher than the
person's true BAC. Temperature is an important variable that should
be measured and controlled when evaluating the accuracy of any breath
test however, to date no machine has been designed to make sure
the subject's breath sample is of the proper temperature.
©
2000 HoltLawFirm, Inc. All rights reserved.
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