Effect of fenestrated sterile drape and face mask on bacterial dispersion toward the periocular area during intravitreal injection

Author:

Phasukkijwatana Nopasak,Jongpipatchai Rawi,Phuksapaisalsilp Peerawoot,Pharkjaksu Sujiraphong,Ngamskulrungroj Popchai,Prakhunhungsit Supalert

Abstract

AbstractThis experimental crossover study was performed to investigate whether fenestrated surgical drapes (covering the nose and mouth but with an opening over the periorbital area) with or without patients’ surgical face masks increase periorbital bacterial dispersion during simulated intravitreal injection conditions. Each of the 16 healthy volunteers performed 14 scenarios involving different mask and drape conditions in both silent and speaking situations. In each scenario, the subject lay down flat on the back with a blood agar plate being held at the inferior orbital rim perpendicular to the face to capture airflow from breathing/speaking. Another blood agar plate placed 50 cm away from the subject served as an experimental control. A total of 224 experiments were performed. Speaking situations significantly showed more colony forming units (CFUs) compared with their controls (P = 0.014). There were no significant differences in CFUs between wearing vs not wearing the masks (P = 0.887 for speaking and P = 0.219 for silent) and using vs not using the drapes (P = 0.941 for speaking and P = 0.687 for silent). Reusable and disposable drapes were also not significantly different (P = 1.00 for speaking and P = 0.625 for silent). Streptococcus spp., the oropharyngeal microbiota, were only cultivated from speaking scenarios. While refraining from speaking (for both practitioners and patients) is the mainstay of reducing bacterial dispersion and risks of post-injection endophthalmitis, the use of fenestrated surgical drapes or patients’ face masks did not significantly affect the amount of bacterial dispersion toward the periorbital area.

Funder

Siriraj Development Research Fund

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Hydrogel-Based Formulations for Drug Delivery to the Posterior Segment of the Eye;Annals of Biomedical Science and Engineering;2023-09-12

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