4.5 Article

Failure of non-vacuum steam sterilization processes for dental handpieces

Journal

JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL INFECTION
Volume 97, Issue 4, Pages 343-347

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhin.2017.09.004

Keywords

Dental handpieces; Steam sterilization; Data loggers; Biological indicators; Chemical indicators; Sterility assurance

Funding

  1. WH, UK
  2. Glasgow University an Industrial Partnership PhD Scholarship

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Background: Dental handpieces are used in critical and semi-critical operative interventions. Although some dental professional bodies recommend that dental handpieces are sterilized between patient use there is a lack of clarity and understanding of the effectiveness of different steam sterilization processes. The internal mechanisms of dental handpieces contain narrow lumens (0.8-2.3 mm) which can impede the removal of air and ingress of saturated steam required to achieve sterilization conditions. Aim: To identify the extent of sterilization failure in dental handpieces using a non-vacuum process. Methods: In-vitro and in-vivo investigations were conducted on widely used UK bench-top steam sterilizers and three different types of dental handpieces. The sterilization process was monitored inside the lumens of dental handpieces using thermometric (TM; data-loggers), chemical indicator (CI), and biological indicator (BI) methods. Findings: All three methods of assessing achievement of sterility within dental handpieces that had been exposed to non-vacuum sterilization conditions demonstrated a significant number of failures [CI: 8/3024 (fails/no. of tests); BI: 15/3024; TM: 56/56] compared to vacuum sterilization conditions (CI: 2/1944; BI: 0/1944; TM: 0/36). The dental handpiece most likely to fail sterilization in the non-vacuum process was the surgical handpiece. Non-vacuum sterilizers located in general dental practice had a higher rate of sterilization failure (CI: 25/1620; BI: 32/1620; TM: 56/56) with no failures in vacuum process. Conclusion: Non-vacuum downward/gravity displacement, type N steam sterilizers are an unreliable method for sterilization of dental handpieces in general dental practice. The handpiece most likely to fail sterilization is the type most frequently used for surgical interventions. (C) 2017 The Healthcare Infection Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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