| Literature DB >> 35942482 |
Andrew F Stephens1,2, Michael Šeman1,3,4, Ziad Nehme3,5,6, Aleksandr Voskoboinik4,6,7, Karen Smith5, Shaun D Gregory1,2, Dion Stub3,4,5.
Abstract
Background: Defibrillation guidelines recommend avoiding patient contact during shock delivery. However, hands-on defibrillation (compressions during shock) and manual pressure augmentation (MPA - pushing on the defibrillator pads during shock) may lead to improved clinical outcomes. There are limited data addressing the protection provided by personal protective equipment (PPE) during hands-on defibrillation and MPA. This study investigated the hand-to-hand and hand-to-knee leakage current experienced by a simulated kneeling provider wearing different PPE.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; Current; Latex Glove; Leakage; Manual Pressure Augmentation; Nitrile Glove
Year: 2022 PMID: 35942482 PMCID: PMC9356271 DOI: 10.1016/j.resplu.2022.100284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Resusc Plus ISSN: 2666-5204
Fig. 1Illustration of pork shoulder used to simulate an adult patient in cardiac arrest. Three hands-on positions were tested in this study. 1 – Pushing on the pads, closed fists; 2 – Pushing on the pads with open palms and fingers overhanging the pad; 3 – Pushing directly on the skin between the pads, open palms.
Fig. 2Circuit diagrams showing provider resistance, personal protective equipment, and pork shoulder between pads. The blue arrow is the point of current measurement. (A) Simulating hand-to-hand leakage, current travels from the positive pad to the negative pad through gloves on each hand. (B) Simulating hand to knee leakage, current travels through a single glove and rescuer trousers to earth.
Fig. 3Render of sensing array with (1) gloved hand for pushing, (2) defibrillator pad, (3) sensor electrode, (4) personal protective equipment being tested, and (5) pork shoulder.
List of all personal protective equipment evaluated in these experiments. All experiments were conducted in three positions: on the defibrillator pads, on the pads with inadvertent finger contact, and directly on the chest. N1 – Paladin nitrile glove; N2 – Medico Gloves nitrile glove; L1 – Flexi latex glove.
| # | Personal Protective Equipment | Nominal Provider Resistance (Ω) | Thickness (mm) | Scenario |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline Measurements – No Pushing | ||||
| 1 | None | 1000 | – | Baseline leakage with normal provider skin resistance |
| 2 | None | 500 | – | Baseline leakage with lowered provider resistance (gold ring, jewelry, sweaty hands, broken skin) |
| Hand-To-Hand Leakage – Pushing | ||||
| 3 | None | 1000 | – | Pushing with no gloves |
| 4 | None | 500 | – | Hands-on with lowered skin resistance and no gloves (e.g., wearing gold ring/jewelry, or having sweaty hands or broken skin) |
| 5 | Single N1 | 1000 | 0.05 | Hands-on with a single layer of high-quality nitrile gloves commonly used by our paramedics and clinicians |
| 6 | Single Layer N2 | 1000 | 0.04 | Hands-on with a single layer of thinner examination gloves |
| 7 | Single Layer L1 | 1000 | 0.06 | Hands-on with a single layer of latex gloves used in our laboratories |
| 8 | Double Layer N1 | 1000 | 0.10 | Hands-on while wearing two high-quality gloves used by our paramedics and clinicians |
| 9 | Double N2 | 1000 | 0.10 | Hands-on while wearing two thinner examination gloves |
| 10 | Double Layer L1 | 1000 | 0.12 | Hands-on while wearing two latex gloves used in our laboratories |
| Hand-to-Knee Leakage – Pushing | ||||
| 11 | Dry Trousers, No Glove | 1000 | 0.24 | Hands-on defibrillation kneeling over the patient, no gloves in a dry environment |
| 12 | Wet Trousers, No Glove | 1000 | 0.24 | Hands-on defibrillation over the patient, no gloves in a wet environment or with heavy sweat |
| 13 | Wet Trousers, Single N1 glove | 1000 | 0.24 + 0.05 | Hands-on defibrillation over the patient, a single layer of high-quality nitrile gloves, in a wet environment or with heavy sweat |
| 14 | Wet Trousers Double N1 Gloves | 1000 | 0.24 + 0.10 | Hands-on defibrillation over the patient, two layers of high-quality nitrile gloves, in a wet environment or with heavy sweat |
Thickness of rescuer trousers and gloves.
Average [range] of leakage current detected during experiments when pushing on the pads, with on the pads with finger overhang, and on the directly on the chest for different personal protective equipment (PPE). Experimental configurations correspond to those in Table 1.
| Experiment Configuration | Short Description | Average Leakage Current (mA) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pads | Finger Overhang | Chest | ||
| 1 | No PPE, No push 1000 Ω | 0.30 [0.20–0.48] | 89.35 [3.67–258.97] | 290.84 [201.20–462.15] |
| 2 | No PPE, No push 500 Ω | 0.44 [0.32–0.64] | 129.29 [6.07–375.25] | 670.66 [646.71–686.62] |
| 3 | No PPE, Pushing 1000 Ω | 0.41 [0.24–0.74] | 173.50 [6.55–258.96] | 364.01 [199.60–446.22] |
| 4 | No PPE, Pushing 500 Ω | 0.51 [0.32–0.68] | 255.75 [0.78–391.22] | 441.98 [0.60–694.61] |
| 5 | Single N1 Glove | 0.13 [0.08–0.24] | 0.39 [0.16–0.60] | 1.20 [0.80–1.59] |
| 6 | Single N2 Glove | 0.19 [0.08–0.34] | 0.61 [0.24–1.28] | 0.33 [0.20–0.60] |
| 7 | Single Latex Glove | 0.41 [0.24–0.58] | 0.54 [0.15–1.28] | 0.54 [0.20–1.00] |
| 8 | Double N1 Gloves | 0.15 [0.12–0.16] | 0.16 [0.16–0.16] | 0.60 [0.40–0.82] |
| 9 | Double N2 Gloves | 0.17 [0.08–0.26] | 0.16 [0.16–0.16] | 0.47 [0.40–0.62] |
| 10 | Double Latex Gloves | 0.19 [0.08–0.32] | 0.38 [0.16–0.80] | 0.60 [0.20–1.20] |
| 11 | Dry Trouser, No Glove | 0.21 [0.20–0.22] | 7.70 [0.40–22.31] | 9.23 [1.00–25.50] |
| 12 | Wet Trouser, No Glove | 0.53 [0.24–0.74] | 15.22 [8.21–23.11] | 18.33 [4.78–25.50] |
| 13 | Wet Trouser, Single N1 | 0.34 [0.14–0.48] | 3.56 [2.15–6.38] | 15.34 [10.16–20.72] |
| 14 | Wet Trouser, Double N1 | 0.21 [0.16–0.24] | 4.08 [2.59–5.58] | 5.28 [5.18–5.38] |
Fig. 4Effect of current on the human body changes with exposure time. Values from this study are compared against established thresholds from international electrical standard IEC 60479-1 and 60479-2. Data are the leakage currents recorded in this study at position 1 (pushing on pads), position 2 (pushing on pads with finger overhang), and position 3 (pushing directly on the chest). Note: All values above Zone 2 occurred with no personal protective equipment.