| Literature DB >> 33040749 |
Amrita R John1, Shine Raju1, Jennifer L Cadnum2, Kipum Lee3,4, Phillip McClellan5, Ozan Akkus5,6,7, Sharon K Miller8, Wayne D Jennings9, Joy A Buehler9, Daniel F Li10, Sarah N Redmond10, Melissa Braskie11, Claudia K Hoyen12, Curtis J Donskey2,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Critical shortages of personal protective equipment, especially N95 respirators, during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues to be a source of concern. Novel methods of N95 filtering face-piece respirator decontamination that can be scaled-up for in-hospital use can help address this concern and keep healthcare workers (HCWs) safe.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33040749 PMCID: PMC7642971 DOI: 10.1017/ice.2020.1257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol ISSN: 0899-823X Impact factor: 3.254
Fig. 1.(A) Placement of the aerosolization device (F) and extra scrubber (Sr) in the middle of the test room. (B) N95 masks suspended on ‘S’ shaped hooks. (C) Test room layout with ventilation on the ceiling providing fresh air (supply) into the room during the vent cycle. (D) The ventilation set up with supply (S) and exhaust (E). Note two 600-cfm blower fans (X) in a push–pull configuration with manually operated gasketed dampers (G). (E) Schematic diagram of the room dimensions and ventilation system.
Fig. 2.The off-gassing set up. The N95 FFR was placed in a sealed polyvinyl chloride cylinder (0.35 cu. ft.) with airflow at 1.5 L/minute entering through one end and a peracetic acid or hydrogen peroxide sensor (Safecide, ChemDAQ, Pittsburgh, PA) connected to the other end. A 15-minute time-weighted average (TWA) for peracetic acid or hydrogen peroxide exposure was measured.
Fig. 3.Efficacy of PAA HLDS for decontamination or disinfection of Geobacillus stearothermophilus spores and MS2. The respirator was exposed to 3 different cycles as in the figure and log10 reductions CFU/PFU studied. Error bars indicate standard error.
Fig. 4.Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of the outer layer of the N95 mask under 100× (images in the left column) and 1,000× magnification (images in the right column. (A) Control. (B–E) Multiple cycles of PAA treatment from 1 to 4. Note increase bubbling on the fibers after PAA exposure. (F) Magnified image of bubbling on fibers.
Fig. 5.Interval plots for mechanical test variables as a function of disinfection cycles. The horizontal line is the median. The box indicates the interquartile range. The whiskers extend to the minimum and maximum values.
The Results of the Instantaneous Loading Tests for Filtration Efficiency
| No. of Cycles Repeated | Flow Rate, L/min | Initial Resistance, | Instantaneous Penetration, | Instantaneous Efficiency, | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3× | 86 | 12.9 | 0.59 | 99.41 | Pass |
| 3× | 86 | 13.5 | 0.31 | 99.69 | Pass |
| 5× | 86 | 14 | 0.51 | 99.49 | Pass |
| 5× | 86 | 13.3 | 0.84 | 99.16 | Pass |
| Specification | 81–89 | ≥ 95 |
The cycle length was a dwell of 16 minutes and a deploy of 32 minutes (optimal cycle). ‘N’× indicates number of times the N95 FFR was treated with this cycle.
The Results of the Full Loading Tests for Filtration Efficiency
| No. of Cycles Repeated | Flow Rate, | Initial Resistance, | Initial Penetration, % | Maximum Penetration, | Filter Efficiency, | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5× | 85 | 14.9 | 0.56 | 1.35 | 98.65 | Pass |
| 5× | 86 | 13.8 | 0.6 | 1.37 | 98.63 | Pass |
| Specification | 81–89 | ≤ 5.0 | ≥ 95 |
The cycle length was a dwell of 16 minutes and a deploy of 32 minutes. ‘N’× indicates the number of times the N95 FFR was treated with this cycle.
The Results of the Hydrogen Peroxide Off-Gassing From the N95 FFR After an Optimal Disinfection Cycle
| Time After Cycle | Instantaneous | 15-Min STEL |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | 2.4 ppm | 1.76 |
| 20 min | 1.4 ppm | 1.15 |
| 40 min | 0.2 ppm | 0.18 ppm |
| 60 min | 0.0 ppm | 0.0 ppm |
| 80 min | 0.0 ppm | 0.0 ppm |
Note. FFR, filstering face-piece respirator; STEL, short-term exposure limit.