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Intoximeters Inc. Web site credits, footnotes, etc...
Drink Wheel
1 The basic idea behind the "Drink Wheel" came from a variety of
different charts and devices for estimating Blood Alcohol Concentration that we
have compiled over the years.
2 The information on alcohol content of
typical drinks from the "Blood Alcohol Estimator" which is distributed by The
Traffic Institute, Northwest University and copyright 1986 Perrygraf, Los
Angeles, CA 91324-3552.
Alcohol and the Human Body
1 The bulk of the information on this page came from
"Medicolegal Aspects of Alcohol Determination in Biological Specimens" which was
edited by James C. Garriott and published by PSG Publishing Company, Inc. of
Littleton, Massachusetts in 1988.
2 The sections on pharmacology are based on
Chapter 2, Pharmacology of Ethyl Alcohol", by James C. Garriott.
3 More specifically, the table titled
"Stages of alcohol intoxication" is from K.M. Dubowski one of the leading
experts on the medicolegal aspects of alcohol use in the United States.
4 The sections relating to absorption,
distribution and elimination are based on Chapter 3, "Disposition of Alcohol in
Man" by Randall C. Baselt and Ivan E. Danhof.
5 The table titled "Alcohol Content of Some
Typical Drinks" came from the "Blood Alcohol Estimator" which is distributed by
The Traffic Institute, Northwest University and copyright 1986 Perrygraf, Los
Angeles, CA 91324-3552.
6 The table "Alcohol Content (in Percent)
of Selected Beverages" is from Chapter 1, "Chemistry of Alcoholic Beverages",
Bill H. McAnalley.
Fuel Cell Technology Applied to Alcohol Breath Testing
1 Stafford, David T. 1993. "Investigation of the Response of
Fuel Cell Based Alcohol Breath Test Instruments to Substances Other than
Ethanol:" Tennessee: University of Tennessee Toxicology Laboratory.
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