| Literature DB >> 33108485 |
Madline Gund1, Jonas Isack1, Matthias Hannig1, Sigrid Thieme-Ruffing2, Barbara Gärtner2, Gabor Boros3, Stefan Rupf4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Surgical masks are usually contaminated during dental treatment. So far it has not been investigated whether a surgical mask itself can be a source of microbial transmission. The aim of this study was therefore to investigate the microbiological contamination of surgical masks during dental treatment and the transfer of microorganisms from the mask to the hands.Entities:
Keywords: Aerosol; Dental practice; Infection control; MALDI TOF mass spectrometry; Microbiology; Surgical face mask
Year: 2020 PMID: 33108485 PMCID: PMC7590255 DOI: 10.1007/s00784-020-03645-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Oral Investig ISSN: 1432-6981 Impact factor: 3.573
Fig. 1Microbiological testing of gloves and face mask worn during treatment. a Direct contact sample of gloves worn during treatment, pressing three digits for 5 s on agar plate. b Evaluation of a contamination pathway by touching the mask for 5 s with a new sterile glove and imprinting this glove according to a and c. Imprint of the mask on agar to analyze contamination with microbials containing aerosols
Fig. 2Summary of the detection frequency and scoring of microbes on agar plates after sampling of gloves worn during treatment, surgical masks, and Mask-touching gloves. The columns each represent the 10 microbiological samples of the 5 treatment modalities carious cavity preparation (P-caries), tooth substance preparation (P-tooth), trepanation and root canal treatment (P-endo), supragingival ultrasonic application (US-supra), subgingival periodontal ultrasonic instrumentation (US-sub). The columns are arranged according to the CFU scoring (score 0: no bacterial growth; score 1: 1–100 scattered CFU; score 2: > 100 CFU; score 3: dense microbial growth). No statistically significant differences were found between the different treatment modalities (treatment glove: p = 0.7, surgical mask: p = 0.9, mask-touching glove: p = 0.3). The contamination of surgical masks was significantly lower than of treatment gloves (*, p = 0.008). Mask-touching gloves displayed significantly lower contamination than surgical masks (**, p = 0.004)
Species of microorganisms classified within this study and frequency of their detection from gloves and masks. The typical habitat in human is indicated (oral: o, dermal: d, low frequency: in branches). The total number of all positive samples (max. n = 150, bold), as well as from gloves worn during treatment, surgical masks, and glove-touching masks (max. n = 50 each, gray), is indicated. Microbial species detected on gloves and masks are presented according to the treatment modalities (max. n = 10 each, italics) carious cavity preparation (P-caries), tooth substance preparation (P-tooth), trepanation and root canal treatment (P-endo), supragingival ultrasonic application (US-supra), and subgingival periodontal ultrasonic instrumentation (US-sub). Colonies only identified on upper taxonomic levels are indicated as spp. or as gram positive or gram negative rods