Publication date: December 2017
Source:Building and Environment, Volume 126
Author(s): Amar Aganovic, Guangyu Cao, Liv-Inger Stenstad, Jan Gunnar Skogås
The presence of surgical lights disturbs the flow of ultraclean air in operating rooms (ORs) with vertical laminar airflow systems (LAF) by creating a wake downstream of the lights. The wake may be characterised by velocities low enough to directly influence the level of airborne microbe-carrying particles (MCP) close to the surgical site in an OR, eventually leading to surgical site infections (SSIs). The influence of surgical lights on airflow distribution during non-operating conditions and on airborne contamination level close to the operating table during mock surgeries was analysed in ORs with vertical LAF systems. The velocity and turbulence intensity (TI) distributions were recorded through a cross-sectional grid of points under surgical lights during non-operating conditions. In order to detect microbiological contamination during operating conditions, four mock surgeries were performed mimicking real surgeries on a porcine tissue. Three of the surgeries were performed under different types of surgical lights and one surgery did not include surgical lights at all. The mean velocity under all three surgical lights was significantly lower (≤0.07 m/s) compared with the mean velocity measured when the LAF was not obstructed by lights (0.24 m/s). At several points in the grid under all three lights, velocities as low as ≤0.02 m/s were measured. Air sampling during mock surgeries recorded at least 1 CFU/m3 for 43% of the samples (n = 16; mean = 1.25; range 0–4) using surgical lights, while not a single bacteria count was recorded without the use of lights (n = 7).
Source:Building and Environment, Volume 126
Author(s): Amar Aganovic, Guangyu Cao, Liv-Inger Stenstad, Jan Gunnar Skogås