Comparison of Surgical Smoke Generated During Electrosurgery with Aerosolized Particulates from Ultrasonic and High-Speed Cutting

“Surgical smoke” is an airborne by-product of electrosurgery comprised of vapour and suspended particles. Although concerns exist that exposure may be harmful, there is a poor understanding of the smoke in terms of particle size, morphology, composition and biological viability. Notably, it is not k...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of biomedical engineering 2021-02, Vol.49 (2), p.560-572
Hauptverfasser: Casey, Vincent J., Martin, Cian, Curtin, Peter, Buckley, Kevin, McNamara, Laoise M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:“Surgical smoke” is an airborne by-product of electrosurgery comprised of vapour and suspended particles. Although concerns exist that exposure may be harmful, there is a poor understanding of the smoke in terms of particle size, morphology, composition and biological viability. Notably, it is not known how the biological tissue source and cutting method influence the smoke. The objective of this study was to develop a collection method for airborne by-product from surgical cutting. This would enable comprehensive analyses of the particulate burden, composition and biological viability. The method was applied to compare the electrosurgical smoke generated (in the absence of any evacuation mechanism) with the aerosolized/airborne by-products generated by ultrasonic and high-speed cutting, from bone and liver tissue cutting. We report a wide range of particle sizes (0.93–806.31  μ m for bone, 0.05–1040.43  μ m for liver) with 50% of the particles being
ISSN:0090-6964
1573-9686
DOI:10.1007/s10439-020-02587-w