| 4.AUTHOR | Friberg-B, Friberg-S, Burman-L-G, Lundholm-R, Ostensson-R. |
|---|---|
| INSTITUTION | Department of Orthopedaedics, Northern University Hospital, Umea, Sweden. |
| TITLE | Inefficiency of upward displacement operating theatre ventilation. |
| SOURCE | J-Hosp-Infect 1996 Aug, VOL: 33 (4), P: 263-72, ISSN: 0195-6701. |
ABSTRACT
A
new thermally based ventilation system ('Floormaster') with inlet of cool clean
air at floor level, and evacuation at the ceiling of the air warmed by activity
in the room (upward displacement ventilation, 17 air changes/h) was compared with
a standard positive pressure (plenum) ventilation system with air supply through
an inclined perforated screen along one wall at the ceiling and evacuation at
floor level (conventional turbulent or mixing system, 16 air changes/h). The study
was made during rigidly standardized sham operations (N = 20) performed in the
same operating room by a six-member team wearing non-woven disposable or cotton
clothing. In general the upward displacement system removed dust particles too
small to carry bacteria (0.16-<0.3 microm, 0.001 <0.01) more efficiently than
the conventional system. However, the displacement system also yielded two to
threefold higher air and surface bacterial counts in areas important for surgical
asepsis (wound area, instrument table) especially with regard to bacterial sedimentation
(0.001 <0.05). The major shortcoming of the displacement system was insufficient
elimination of the larger bacteria-carrying particles. The type of clothing worn
by the members of the team did not influence the overall results. We conclude
that an upward displacement system will lead to increased counts of airborne and
sedimenting bacteria and thus increase the risk of postoperative infection in
comparison with conventional operating room ventilation systems. Author.
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