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Sounds like you're drunk! New earmuffs measure your blood alcohol level

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Japanese researchers have developed a non-invasive pair of earmuffs that, when worn, can measure real-time changes in a person's blood alcohol concentration (BAC). The team say the device is fitted with an ethanol vapour sensor which picks up the booze coming off of your skin, which in turn causes a light fitted to the earmuffs to turn on, and how bright that light is shows how plastered you are. "Why the ears?" you ask - well the team found our ears to give off as much alcohol as our breath, which would allow the earmuffs to be used instead of police roadside breathalisers (because who wants to blow into a tiny tube when you could wear these futuristic earmuffs?).

Journal/conference: Scientific Reports

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41598-021-90146-1

Organisation/s: Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU), Tokyo, Japan

Funder: This work was partly supported by Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS, Japan) KAKENHI Grant Number JP 17H01759, 16KK0143 and 15H04013; a grant from Japan IDDM network; the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT, Japan) Special Funds for “Cooperative Research Project of Research Center for Biomedical Engineering”.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Earmuffs measure blood alcohol levels through the skin 

A new device that fits over a person’s ears and enables non-invasive measurement of real-time changes in blood alcohol levels through the skin is presented in a proof-of-principle study in Scientific Reports.

The device, devised by Kohji Mitsubayashi and colleagues, consists of a modified pair of commercial earmuffs that collect gas released through the skin of a person’s ears, and an ethanol vapour sensor. If the sensor detects ethanol vapour, it releases light, the intensity of which allows for ethanol concentrations to be calculated.

The authors used their device to continuously monitor ethanol vapour released through the ears of three male volunteers, who had consumed alcohol with a concentration of 0.4 g per kg body weight, for 140 minutes. The ethanol concentrations of the volunteers’ breath were also measured at regular intervals using an additional ethanol vapour sensor and a device containing reagents that change colour when exposed to ethanol.

The authors observed that changes in the concentration of ethanol released through the ears and breath were similar over time for all volunteers. As previous research found that ethanol concentrations in the breath and blood are correlated, this indicates that the device could be used instead of a breathalyser to estimate blood alcohol levels. The average highest concentration of ethanol released through the ears was found to be 148 parts per billion, double the concentration previously reported to be released through the skin of the hand. Previous devices have used the hand to measure blood alcohol levels as a less invasive alternative to breath, as these devices do not require a tube to be inserted into the mouth. The findings suggest that the ears may be a more suitable location for this.

The authors propose that the device could be used to measure other gases released through the skin, for example in disease screening.

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