Forced-air systems used to keep patients warm during surgery may affect the performance of operating room (OR) ventilation systemspotentially increasing exposure to airborne contaminants, reports a study in the August issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia, the journal of the International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS). By comparison, conductive warming systems don't disrupt ventilation airflows over the surgical site, according to the report by Dr. Kumar G. Belani of University of Minnesota and colleagues. But an accompanying editorial notes that there's not yet enough evidence to change current practice with regard to patient warming in the OR.
The researchers compared the effects of two different types of patient warming systems on airflow in the OR. Modern ORs use "sophisticated ventilation systems to create localized zones of highly filtered air over the surgical site," according to Dr Belani and coauthors.
For the experimental study, the researchers set up an OR as for knee replacement surgery, using a mannequin. They then assessed the performance of the OR ventilation system using "neutrally buoyant detergent bubbles," which made it possible to visualize airflow patterns under different conditions.
Airflow was compared using a forced-air warming system, which distributes heated air under the surgical drapes and over the patient; and a conductive warming system (such as heated water blankets), which applies direct heat to the patient's skin.
Forced-air warming "generated hot air convection currents that mobilized bubbles over the anesthesia site and into the surgical site," Belani and colleagues write. The average "bubble count" in the simulated surgical field was more than 100 with the forced-air warmer, compared to about 0.50 with a conductive warming system.
The convection currents created by the forced-air system drew air from under the surgical drapes and into the surgical site. The concern is that this could mobilize bacteria or other contaminants from nonsterile areas, or interfere with the ventilation system's ability to clear contaminants from the surgical site.
The use of " downward displacement" OR ventilation systems had previously been shown to reduce exposure to microbes and infection rates during certain types of surgery. But more recent studies have found no reduction in infection rates. The new study was designed to test whether forced-air warming systemsa relatively recent introduction to ORscould be affecting ventilation performance.
The results suggest that forced-air patient warming systems may indeed affect airflows in the OR, potentially increasing exposure to bacteria and other contaminants during surgery. Belani and coauthors conclude, "These findings warrant future research into the effects of forced air warming excess heat on clinical outcomes during contamination-sensitive surgery."
In the editorial, Drs. Charles Weissman and W. Bosseau Murray note that the findings provide only indirect evidence of potential infection risk, in a simulated setting. That's in contrast to the known benefits of preventing drops in body temperature during surgery. Pending further research, Weissman and Murray write, "[T]he prudent coursemight be to continue with the presently proven successful warming therapies, but keep an open mind about the possible future need to change practice."
Comprehensive Strategies in Wound Care: Insights From Madhavi Ponnapalli, MD
November 22nd 2024Madhavi Ponnapalli, MD, discusses effective wound care strategies, including debridement techniques, offloading modalities, appropriate dressing selection, compression therapy, and nutritional needs for optimal healing outcomes.
The Leapfrog Group and the Positive Effect on Hospital Hand Hygiene
November 21st 2024The Leapfrog Group enhances hospital safety by publicizing hand hygiene performance, improving patient safety outcomes, and significantly reducing health care-associated infections through transparent standards and monitoring initiatives.
Why Clinical Expertise Is the Cornerstone to Your Most Profitable Business Line
November 14th 2024Perioperative nurses bring vital skills in patient safety, infection control, and quality improvement. They enhance surgical outcomes and support health care systems during complex, high-risk procedures.
Strengthening Defenses: Integrating Infection Control With Antimicrobial Stewardship
October 11th 2024Use this handout to explain the basics of why infection prevention and control and antimicrobial stewardship are essential and how the 2 fields must have a unified approach to patient and staff safety
Blood Product Overtransfusion Is a Global Issue: Here Are 5 Reasons the Practice Must Change
October 9th 2024If a patient receives treatment or therapy that they do not need, it can cause unnecessary harm. This is true for medications, surgeries, and medical procedures, especially blood transfusions.