| Literature DB >> 34873655 |
Rieko Oishi1, Kiwamu Nakamura2, Yoko Yahagi3, Kazutaka Ohashi4, Yukiko Takano4, Rie Harada2, Shinju Obara5, Satoki Inoue5, Keiji Kanemitsu2, Masahiro Murakawa5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Some institutions reuse cuff syringes and do not periodically sterilize cuff pressure gauges. Pathogenic bacterial contamination of such equipment may increase the probability of pathogen transmission to patients during anesthetic procedures. Therefore, microbial contamination on cuff syringes, cuff pressure gauges, and their surroundings was assessed in the operating rooms of a university-affiliated tertiary care hospital in Japan.Entities:
Keywords: Anesthesia; Bacterial infections; Equipment contamination; Hospital-acquired infections, HAI; Infections; Operating rooms; Operating rooms, ORs; Syringes
Year: 2021 PMID: 34873655 PMCID: PMC8648932 DOI: 10.1186/s40981-021-00486-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JA Clin Rep ISSN: 2363-9024
Fig. 1Equipment-sampling sites. A cuff syringe, B cuff pressure gauge, C drawer where the cuff syringes are stored, D drawer of the anesthesia machine where the cuff pressure gauges are stored
Identified bacterial sample aggregates
| Room number | Organism(s) and biotype | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outer components of cuff syringes | Inner components of cuff syringes | Cuff pressure gauges | Drawers of cuff syringes | Drawers of cuff pressure gauges | Computer mice attached to anesthesiamachines | |
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