Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery (Dec 2020)

Impact of surgical clothing and footwear on operating room contamination during standstill and intraoperative stepping motion

  • Toshiyuki Tateiwa,
  • Toshinori Masaoka,
  • Tsunehito Ishida,
  • Takaaki Shishido,
  • Yasuhito Takahashi,
  • Kengo Yamamoto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2309499020976232
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28

Abstract

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Background: In view of preventing surgical site infection (SSI) in the orthopedic operating room (OR), evidence concerning types of footwear and clothing is limited. This study aimed to investigate how different footwear and clothing affect the cleanliness of the OR environment. Methods: The airborne dust concentration in a bioclean room (NASA class 100) was measured around an operator by using a handheld particle counter under the following conditions: (I) wearing a sterilized full-type space suit with OR dedicated clean sandals; (II) wearing a sterilized full-type space suit with non-dedicated (outside) shoes or severely contaminated outside shoes with surgical glove powder (2 µm mean particle size); and (III) wearing an unsterilized medical scrub uniform with OR dedicated sandals. The participant was standing still or stepping in place at 1 Hz during the testing. Results: The concentrations of airborne dusts in the operative field were independent of footwear and clothing types under the stand-still condition. However, these values significantly increased 1.96- to 16.23-fold after simple stepping motion in all the test conditions, and often became dissatisfaction level with the NASA100 requirement for the OR cleanliness. The worst contamination occurred when an operator wore the powder-contaminated shoes and also the unsterilized scrub uniform. Conclusion: The present study showed that the stepping motion triggered a considerable contamination in the operative field (beyond the level of NASA100 threshold) particularly when an operator used the outside shoes or unsterilized scrub uniform. Therefore, these results tell us that the one-footwear system (i.e., no use of OR dedicated clean shoes) and unsterilized scrub are likely to be a potential risk factor for SSI. Nevertheless, further studies are necessary to conclude the real efficacy of OR dedicated shoes and sterilized clothes on the SSI prevention.