| Literature DB >> 34475144 |
David H Ballard1, Audrey J Dang2, Benjamin M Kumfer2, Patricia B Weisensee3, J Mark Meacham3, Alex R Scott4, Mary Ruppert-Stroescu5, Broc A Burke6, Jason Morris4, Connie Gan4, Jesse Hu4, Bradley King7, Udayabhanu Jammalamadaka1, Sena Sayood8, Stephen Liang8, Shruti Choudhary2, David Dhanraj2, Bruno Maranhao6, Christine Millar9, J Tyler Bertroche10, Nirah Shomer11, Pamela K Woodard1, Pratim Biswas2, Richard Axelbaum2, Guy Genin3,12,13, Brent J Williams2, Kathleen Meacham14.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The COVID-19 pandemic has precipitated widespread shortages of filtering facepiece respirators (FFRs) and the creation and sharing of proposed substitutes (novel designs, repurposed materials) with limited testing against regulatory standards. We aimed to categorically test the efficacy and fit of potential N95 respirator substitutes using protocols that can be replicated in university laboratories.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; adult anaesthesia; health & safety; occupational & industrial medicine; preventive medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34475144 PMCID: PMC8413478 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-045557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 3.006
Figure 1Overview of essential surgical N95 attributes.
Figure 2The six designs are displayed with an image of them on a user in the second column, and the filter material used in the third column. The last two columns present the respirators stratified by standardised face size of the user. Radial bar plots display overall fit factor from the OSHA 7-minute standardised fit test for each design as well as the 3M N95 for regular and small size standardised users. Green bars represent passing scores, 100 or greater, while red bars indicate failing scores. Areas noted by users to leak air were highlighted. OSHA, Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Figure 3Fit scores across the six scored OSHA fit test sections are displayed for each respirator. An overall fit factor of 100 is required to pass testing; however, a respirator need not pass all fit testing segments as the total fit score is a weighted average of all segments. OSHA, Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Figure 4(A) Quality factor, (B) filtration efficiency (primary y-axis, red) and pressure drop (secondary y-axis, blue) observed for materials tested with an air flow face velocity of 7.6±0.1 cm/s and 300 nm challenge NaCl particles. Error bars for filtration efficiency and pressure drop are 95% CIs for mean values (represented as horizontal lines). The 95% filtration efficiency is marked as a dashed red line.
Figure 5Fabric characterisation: wettability and splatter testing. (A) Wetting: optical images of the two tested fabrics (Halyard and Filti), along with images of milk droplets with advancing contact angles of 120° and 127°, respectively. Visible holes pin the liquid (receding contact angles: 0°) and are a possible weak point for liquid penetration. (B) Repellency: splatter testing, that is, resistance to high-velocity liquid jet penetration (test liquid: whole milk at 4.5, 5.5 and 6.35 m/s), for single (left half-circle) and double (right half-circle) layers of Halyard and Filti fabrics. Red indicates repellency failure, that is, penetration of liquid through the fabric layer(s). Green indicates a passed test, if the majority of sampled fabrics did not show milk breakthrough. (C) Multilayer: optical image of the front (top) and interlayer (bottom) surfaces after liquid jet impingement. Milk (dyed with red food colour) penetrated the first layer and deposited on the underlying layer, but did not break through the second layer.