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Review
. 2005:11 Suppl 1:10-3.
doi: 10.1111/j.1601-0825.2005.01081.x.

Trimethylaminuria (fish-odour syndrome) and oral malodour

Affiliations
Review

Trimethylaminuria (fish-odour syndrome) and oral malodour

S C Mitchell. Oral Dis. 2005.

Abstract

A small but important percentage of oral malodour cases have an extra-oral aetiology and certain of these fall into the category of 'blood-borne halitosis'. Odoriferous substances generated within the body and transported to the lungs via the circulatory system may, if sufficiently volatile, leave with the exhaled air and impart a foetid odour to the breath. The aliphatic tertiary amine, trimethylamine, is such a volatile compound that is generated to excess in patients with a metabolic disorder known as trimethylaminuria (fish-odour syndrome). This article highlights this condition and draws attention to its potential role in the causation of recalcitrant oral malodour.

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