4.6 Article

A clinical observational analysis of aerosol emissions from dental procedures

期刊

PLOS ONE
卷 17, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0265076

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资金

  1. National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) [COV0333]
  2. NIHR through the Academic Clinical Fellowship scheme
  3. Wellcome Trust GW4-Clinical Academic Training PhD Fellowship
  4. Wellcome Trust [220530/Z/20/Z]
  5. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/P018459/1]
  6. [288784]
  7. [CPMS-ID: 47097]
  8. Wellcome Trust [220530/Z/20/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust
  9. National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR) [COV0333] Funding Source: National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR)

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The study quantified the aerosol generated during various dental procedures and identified the potential sources of aerosol generation. It found that high and slow speed drilling procedures may pose a greater risk of salivary contamination. This study provides evidence for better evaluation of risk and implementation of appropriate mitigation strategies.
Aerosol generating procedures (AGPs) are defined as any procedure releasing airborne particles <5 mu m in size from the respiratory tract. There remains uncertainty about which dental procedures constitute AGPs. We quantified the aerosol number concentration generated during a range of periodontal, oral surgery and orthodontic procedures using an aerodynamic particle sizer, which measures aerosol number concentrations and size distribution across the 0.5-20 mu m diameter size range. Measurements were conducted in an environment with a sufficiently low background to detect a patient's cough, enabling confident identification of aerosol. Phantom head control experiments for each procedure were performed under the same conditions as a comparison. Where aerosol was detected during a patient procedure, we assessed whether the size distribution could be explained by the non-salivary contaminated instrument source in the respective phantom head control procedure using a two-sided unpaired t-test (comparing the mode widths (log(sigma)) and peak positions (D-P,D-C)). The aerosol size distribution provided a robust fingerprint of aerosol emission from a source. 41 patients underwent fifteen different dental procedures. For nine procedures, no aerosol was detected above background. Where aerosol was detected, the percentage of procedure time that aerosol was observed above background ranged from 12.7% for ultrasonic scaling, to 42.9% for 3-in-1 air + water syringe. For ultrasonic scaling, 3-in-1 syringe use and surgical drilling, the aerosol size distribution matched the non-salivary contaminated instrument source, with no unexplained aerosol. High and slow speed drilling produced aerosol from patient procedures with different size distributions to those measured from the phantom head controls (mode widths log(sigma)) and peaks (D-P,D-C, p< 0.002) and, therefore, may pose a greater risk of salivary contamination. This study provides evidence for sources of aerosol generation during common dental procedures, enabling more informed evaluation of risk and appropriate mitigation strategies.

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