Use of double gloves to protect the surgeon from blood contact during aesthetic procedures.

Aesthetic plastic surgery 1995 Vol.19(3) p. 265-7

Greco RJ, Garza JR

Abstract

The potential for blood contact with nonintact skin puts operating room personnel at an increased risk of exposure to hepatitis or HIV virus. Frank needle-stick injury to the surgeon has been shown to occur once every 20-40 operations. It has been shown that blood contact exposure during aesthetic surgery occurs in 32% of the operations in which a single pair of surgical gloves is used (surgeon 39.7%, assistant 23%). The reduction of blood contact exposure during aesthetic surgical procedures by using two pairs of gloves was tested and demonstrated. Contact rates decreased by 70%. Outer-glove perforations occurred in 25.6% of the cases, while inner-glove perforations occurred in only 10% of the cases (surgeon 8.7%, assistant 3.5%). All of the inner-glove perforations occurred during procedures that lasted longer than two hours, and in no case was there an inner-glove defect without a corresponding outer-glove perforation. The nondominant index finger (33%) was the most common location. Double gloving during aesthetic procedures reduced the operating room personnel's risk of blood contact exposure by 70% when compared with single-glove use.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 blood scispacy 1
해부 skin scispacy 1
해부 inner-glove scispacy 1
합병증 inner-glove perforations scispacy 1
질환 hepatitis or HIV virus scispacy 1
질환 Frank needle-stick injury C0085178
Needlestick Injuries
scispacy 1
질환 reduction of blood contact scispacy 1
질환 perforations C0549099
Perforation (observation)
scispacy 1
기타 HIV virus scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Blood-Borne Pathogens; Gloves, Surgical; HIV Infections; Hepatitis B; Humans; Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional; Needlestick Injuries; Risk Factors; Surgery, Plastic