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A Smoke Evacuator Equipped With a Filter Contributes Enough to Safe Gas Exhaustion From the Abdominal Cavity

Authors :
Kiyokazu Nakajima
Yukinori Kurokawa
Makoto Yamasaki
Hidetoshi Eguchi
Masashi Hirota
Tsuyoshi Takahashi
Yuichiro Doki
Hidekazu Takahashi
Source :
Asian Journal of Endoscopic Surgery. 15:427-431
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Surgical plume (SP) carries biological risks such as virus transmission. An evacuation system can remove SP from the surgical field, but is it safe to release evacuated gas into the operating room (OR) atmosphere? We examined this using a commercially available evacuator equipped with a filter under a laparoscopic porcine surgery model. SP was generated by activating an electrocautery or ultrasonic scalpel on the surface of the liver, and we evaluated whether DNA fragments derived from porcine tissue were present in the exhausted gas from the evacuation system into the atmosphere. DNA fragments were detected in the inlet gas of the evacuation system, while it was not detected in the outlet gas. As far as pathogen transmission via SP in the abdominal cavity is concerned, if the smoke evacuator ensures filter adsorption, it seems that there is little risk in releasing the suction gas into the atmosphere in the OR.

Details

ISSN :
17585910 and 17585902
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Asian Journal of Endoscopic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....93949ced779e288ac598bce461a4abd0