Electrosurgical Smoke: Ultrafine Particle Measurements and Work Environment Quality in Different Operating Theatres
Journal article, 2017

Air cleanliness in operating theatres (OTs) is an important factor for preserving the health of both the patient and the medical staff. Particle contamination in OTs depends mainly on the surgery process, ventilation principle, personnel clothing systems and working routines. In many open surgical operations, electrosurgical tools (ESTs) are used for tissue cauterization. ESTs generate a significant airborne contamination, as surgical smoke. Surgical smoke is a work environment quality problem. Ordinary surgical masks and OT ventilation systems are inadequate to control this problem. This research work is based on numerous monitoring campaigns of ultrafine particle concentrations in OTs, equipped with upward displacement ventilation or with a downward unidirectional airflow system. Measurements performed during ten real surgeries highlight that the use of ESTs generates a quite sharp and relevant increase of particle concentration in the surgical area as well within the entire OT area. The measured contamination level in the OTs are linked to surgical operation, ventilation principle, and ESTs used. A better knowledge of airborne contamination is crucial for limiting the personnel’s exposure to surgical smoke. Research results highlight that downward unidirectional OTs can give better conditions for adequate ventilation and contaminant removal performances than OTs equipped with upward displacement ventilation systems.

Operating theatre

Electrosurgical tool

Work environment quality

Ventilation principles

Surgical smoke

Ultrafine particles

Author

Francesco Romano

Politecnico di Milano

Jan Gusten

Chalmers, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Building Services Engineering

Stefano De Antonellis

Politecnico di Milano

Cesare M. Joppolo

Politecnico di Milano

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

1661-7827 (ISSN) 1660-4601 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 2 137- 137

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Building Futures (2010-2018)

Energy

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Medical Engineering

Other Medical and Health Sciences

DOI

10.3390/ijerph14020137

More information

Created

10/7/2017