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Covid-19 infection can be detected in breath tests: Study

Written by  Dinkle Popli -- February 24th 2022 02:53 PM
Covid-19 infection can be detected in breath tests: Study

Covid-19 infection can be detected in breath tests: Study

Gothenburg, February 23: According to a new study, traces of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus that causes Covid-19 can be detected in microscopically small fluid droplets exhaled during a very short time span. Also Read |Air India's special flight lands at Delhi airport with over 240 passengers from Ukraine Researchers from the University of Gothenburg found that aerosol particles with the ribonucleic acid (RNA) virus can be found early in the course of Covid-19. The study was published in the journal 'Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses'. New research demonstrated that a few breaths are sufficient for detecting traces of viruses in small fluid droplets. This immediately leads to conjecture about possibly replacing unpleasant nasal swabs tests with convenient and easy breath tests. 20-breathing-techniques-can-help-detect-infection-5 Emilia Viklund, a doctoral student in occupational and environmental medicine and lead author of the study said, "We show that aerosol particles with the ribonucleic acid (RNA) virus can be found early in the course of Covid-19. The particles we can detect are very small-less than five micrometres in diameter and we have here managed to capture particles with RNA virus in just a few breaths." Also Read | Indian students return home as tension over Ukraine escalates In an initial small study involving only 10 subjects conducted in the autumn of 2020, only one of the samples was positive. The researchers believed this resulted from conducting measurements too late in the course of the disease. In collaboration with Sahlgrenska University Hospital, which allowed parallel measurement in connection with employees taking polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests on the hospital grounds, the study eventually evolved to include more subjects in an earlier stage of the disease. These measurements were conducted in the spring of 2021 on medical professionals who had just submitted positive PCR samples for Covid-19. -PTC News    


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