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Question:
What is "mouth alcohol"?
Answer:
"Mouth alcohol" refers to the existence of any alcohol in the mouth
or esophagus. If this is present during a breath test, then the results will
be falsely high. This is because the breath machine assumes that the breath
is from the lungs; for complex physiological reasons, its internal computer
multiplies the amount of alcohol by 2100. Thus, even a tiny amount of alcohol
breathed directly into the machine from the mouth or throat rather than from
the lungs can have a significant impact.
Mouth alcohol can be caused in many ways. Belching, burping, hiccupping
or vomiting within 20 minutes before taking the test can bring vapor from
alcoholic beverages still in the stomach up into the mouth and throat. Taking
a breath freshener can send a machine's reading way up (such products as
Binaca and Listerine have alcohol in them); cough syrups and other products
also contain alcohol. Dental bridges and dental caps can trap alcohol. Blood
in the mouth from an injury is yet another source of inaccurate breath test
results: breathed into the mouthpiece, any alcohol in the blood will be multiplied
2100 times. A chronic "reflux" condition from gastric distress
or a hiatal hernia can cause elevated BAC readings.
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