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Toshiba Unveils Disease-Detecting Breathalyzer

Published Mar 20, 2014

Japan’s Toshiba unveiled a breathalyzer that it says can detect a wide range of diseases just 30 seconds after a person blows into the machine.

The device, about the size of a small dishwasher, has a nozzle into which the patient blows several times.

It then analyzes the puffs for traces of several gases, which can signal the presence of several health problems including diabetes, stomach ailments, and even the ordinary hangover.

“A breath exhaled into the machine is irradiated with an infrared laser, and then trace gases are detected,” the company said in a statement.

Those gases include acetaldehyde, methane, and acetone, all of which can point to the presence of various health problems.

Toshiba said it would expand the number of gases—and diseases—that its machine can detect, with an eye to starting commercial production next year.

The healthcare segment is a key unit for Toshiba, which is best known for its consumer electronics.



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