TY - JOUR T1 - The impact of brushing teeth on carbon-14 urea breath test results. JF - Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology JO - J. Nucl. Med. Technol. SP - 162 LP - 164 VL - 28 IS - 3 AU - E Higazy AU - F Al-Saeedi AU - I Loutfi AU - S Heiba AU - M Kalaoui AU - B Al-Nakib AU - S Patty AU - A Mohammed AU - S Gopinath AU - M Mathew AU - A Hussein AU - M Samy AU - A Elgazzar Y1 - 2000/09/01 UR - http://tech.snmjournals.org/content/28/3/162.abstract N2 - The 14C urea breath test noninvasively detects the presence of the urease-producing bacteria Helicobacter pylori in the stomach. Several sources of errors have been identified to cause false or indeterminate results on the test. The objective of this study was to identify whether brushing teeth affects the test results.We performed the 14C urea breath test on 168 patients, with breath samples counted at 10 and 20 min after oral administration of 2 microCi (74 kBq) 14C urea. Ninety-four patients brushed their teeth before the test while 74 did not.Thirty-six of the 74 patients (49%) who did not brush their teeth had positive results at 10 min, which became negative at 20 min. None of the 94 patients who brushed their teeth before testing showed this pattern with agreement of results at 10 and 20 min.We recommend brushing teeth before the 14C urea breath test since it significantly decreased the ambiguous results of the test in our laboratory. ER -