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Environmental controls in operating theatres

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JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL INFECTION
卷 51, 期 2, 页码 79-84

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W B SAUNDERS CO LTD
DOI: 10.1053/jhin.2002.1217

关键词

surgical wound infection; operating rooms; environmental monitoring; quality control; reference standards; air microbiology

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Surgical-site infection is the leading complication of surgery. Normal skin flora of patients or healthcare workers causes more than half all infections following clean surgery, but the importance of airborne bacteria in this setting remains controversial. Modern operating theatres have conventional plenum ventilation with filtered air where particles greater than or equal to5 mum are removed. For orthopaedic and other implant surgery, laminar-flow systems are used with high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters where particles greater than or equal to0.3 mum are removed. The use of ultra-clean air has been shown to reduce infection rates significantly in orthopaedic implant surgery. Few countries have set bacterial threshold limits for conventionally ventilated operating rooms, although most recommend 20 air changes per hour to obtain 50-150 colony forming units/m(3) of air. There are no standardized methods for bacterial air sampling or its frequency. With the use of HEPA filters in operating theatre ventilation, there is a tendency to apply cleanroom technology standards used in industry for hospitals. These are based on measuring the presence of particles of varying sizes and numbers, and are better suited than bacterial sampling. Environmental bacterial sampling in operating theatres should be limited to investigation of epidemics, validation of protocols, or changes made in materials which could influence the microbial content. (C) 2002 The Hospital Infection Society.

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