Health risks from vaporizing blood.Federal law requires that employers protect health care workers from the AIDS virus and other potentially infectious agents by employing "universal precautions" to limit exposure to blood and other bodily fluids. This generally means wearing gloves or masks where blood may be present. But surgery in which tissue is burned off doesn't automatically trigger these mandatory precautions, according to Douglas E. Ott, a physician at the Mercer University school of engineering History MUSE, founded in 1985, is the only private engineering school in Georgia and one of only two engineering schools in the state. MUSE offers undergraduate and graduate degrees and is the primary provider of engineers for Robins Air Force Base in Warner Robins, Georgia, in Macon, Ga. That oversight may put surgical crews at risk, he argued last month in Atlanta at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), private organization devoted to furthering the work of scientists and improving the effectiveness of science in the promotion of human welfare. . The smoke emitted during laser cauterization cauterization /cau·ter·iza·tion/ (kaw?ter-i-za´shun) destruction of tissue with a cautery. cauterization destruction of tissue with a cautery. can travel 40 yards or more, he notes, prompting complaints from surgical crews several rooms away. And while such workers may complain about tearing eyes or respiratory irritation, Ott worries even more about infectious agents that may have hitched a ride into nasal passages along with that smoke. As lasers and other cauterizing devices vaporize targeted tissue, some of the surrounding, at least partially unburned cells will be freed to waft away with the smoke, Ott notes. Though hospitals provide minivacuums to suck up to draw into the mouth; to draw up by suction or absorption. See also: Suck the irritating combustion products, he says, surgical staffs don't use these devices as religiously or carefully as they should--primarily because they consider smoke no more than a nuisance. In fact, he notes, one 1991 study by researchers at the State University of New York (body) State University of New York - (SUNY) The public university system of New York State, USA, with campuses throughout the state. in Syracuse cultured HIV, the AIDS-causing virus, from smoke emitted during laser cauterization of infected tissue. Ott argues that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), U.S. agency established (1970) in the Dept. of Labor (see Labor, United States Department of) to develop and enforce regulations for the safety and health of workers in businesses that are engaged in interstate should explicitly target for mandatory engineering controls any aerosols produced by the combustion of blood. OSHA OSHA n. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, a branch of the US Department of Labor responsible for establishing and enforcing safety and health standards in the workplace. should require smoke evacuation when open-air tissue cauterization is under way and consider recommending respirators for surgical crews--because masks offer ineffective protection against aerosols. He also recommends that hospitals install ultraviolet lighting, air ionizers, and other antimicrobial technologies. As it is performed today, Ott told Science News, cauterizing surgery contributes substantially to making "the operating room the most polluted part of the hospital." |
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