| Literature DB >> 31614743 |
Seth D Judson1,2, Vincent J Munster3.
Abstract
Recent nosocomial transmission events of emerging and re-emerging viruses, including Ebola virus, Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, Nipah virus, and Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever orthonairovirus, have highlighted the risk of nosocomial transmission of emerging viruses in health-care settings. In particular, concerns and precautions have increased regarding the use of aerosol-generating medical procedures when treating patients with such viral infections. In spite of increasing associations between aerosol-generating medical procedures and the nosocomial transmission of viruses, we still have a poor understanding of the risks of specific procedures and viruses. In order to identify which aerosol-generating medical procedures and emerging viruses pose a high risk to health-care workers, we explore the mechanisms of aerosol-generating medical procedures, as well as the transmission pathways and characteristics of highly pathogenic viruses associated with nosocomial transmission. We then propose how research, both in clinical and experimental settings, could advance current infection control guidelines.Entities:
Keywords: aerosols; cross infection; ebolavirus; health personnel; hemorrhagic fevers; infection control; risk; viral; virus diseases; viruses
Year: 2019 PMID: 31614743 PMCID: PMC6832307 DOI: 10.3390/v11100940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Potential types of aerosol-generating medical procedures (AGMPs). AGMPs can be divided into procedures that induce the patient to produce aerosols and procedures that mechanically generate aerosols themselves.
Potential aerosol-generating medical procedures involved in nosocomial virus transmission.
| AGMP | How/Where Aerosols May Be Generated |
|---|---|
| Bronchoscopy * | Induced cough, respiratory tract |
| Cardiopulmonary resuscitation * | Induced cough, respiratory tract |
| Noninvasive ventilation * | Possible mechanical dispersal of aerosols, respiratory tract |
| Tracheal intubation * | Induced cough, respiratory tract |
| Manual ventilation * | Possible mechanical dispersal of aerosols, respiratory tract |
| Surgery | Cutting bone and tendon, and irrigation aerosolize blood |
| Sputum induction | Induced cough, respiratory tract |
| Nebulizer treatment | Possible mechanical dispersal of aerosols, respiratory tract |
| Suctioning | Possible mechanical dispersal of aerosols, respiratory tract |
| Laser plume | Mechanical dispersal of aerosols |
* Possible association with SARs-CoV transmission [11,12,13].
Emerging viruses that may pose a high risk to health-care personnel when performing aerosol-generating medical procedures.
| Family, Virus | Infectious via Aerosol? | Evidence in Respiratory Tract? | Nosocomial Transmission/AGMPs? |
|---|---|---|---|
| i, ii, iii. NHPs infected by aerosol administration [ | Upper respiratory: | ii, iii. Nosocomial transmission [ | |
| Lower respiratory: | |||
| i, ii, iii. Laboratory workers infected by inhaling aerosols [ | Upper respiratory: | i, ii. Nosocomial transmission [ | |
| ii. Causes human respiratory disease. Viral antigen in human lung [ | |||
| ii. Laboratory and health-care workers infected by inhaling aerosols [ | Upper respiratory: | i, ii. Nosocomial transmission [ | |
| Lower respiratory: | |||
| i, ii. NHPs infected by aerosol administration [ | Upper respiratory: | i. Nosocomial transmission [ | |
| Lower respiratory: | |||
| i. Known human-to-human aerosol transmission | Upper respiratory: | i. Nosocomial transmission [ | |
| Lower respiratory: | |||
| i. ii. Suspected aerosol transmission | Upper respiratory: | ii. Nosocomial transmission [ | |
| Lower respiratory: |