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Experimental study of the potential hazards of surgical smoke from powered instruments

Authors
In, S. M.Park, D. -Y.Sohn, I. K.Kim, C. -H.Lim, H. L.Hong, S. -A.Jung, D. Y.Jeong, S. -Y.Han, J. H.Kim, H. J.
Issue Date
Nov-2015
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
Keywords
Surgical smoke; Cancer
Citation
British Journal of Surgery, v.102, no.12, pp 1581 - 1586
Pages
6
Journal Title
British Journal of Surgery
Volume
102
Number
12
Start Page
1581
End Page
1586
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/10175
DOI
10.1002/bjs.9910
ISSN
0007-1323
1365-2168
Abstract
BackgroundMany surgical instruments have been replaced with powered devices in open gastrointestinal and laparoscopic surgery. The production of smoke as a result of vaporization of surgical tissue is inevitable, and exposure to surgical smoke is a long-standing concern. These vapours are potentially hazardous to patients and surgical teams. The present research was designed to compare various surgical devices to determine whether viable cells exist in their surgical smoke. MethodsThe search for viable cells in surgical smoke was conducted using both in vitro and in vivo experiments. Various cancers were cauterized with electrocautery, radiofrequency ablation and ultrasonic scalpels, and the resulting surgical smoke was aspirated with Transwell((R)) membrane; viable cells were sought in the surgical smoke. In an in vivo experiment, samples of SCC7 were cauterized with an ultrasonic scalpel and the sediment from the rinsed Transwell((R)) membrane liquid after centrifugation was injected subcutaneously into the lower back of mice. ResultsViable cells were found only in the smoke from ultrasonic scalpels (in all 25 samples taken 5cm from the cautery; 2 of 25 samples at 10cm). Viable cells in the surgical smoke from ultrasonic scalpels implanted in mice grew in 16 of 40 injection sites. Histological and biochemical analyses revealed that these cancer cells were identical to the cancer cells cauterized by the ultrasonic scalpel. ConclusionViable tumour cells are produced in the surgical smoke from tumour dissection by ultrasonic scalpel. Surgical smoke is a byproduct of dissection using a number of powered devices. Hazards to operating room personnel and patients are unclear. This study has shown that use of an ultrasonic dissection device can produce smoke that contains viable tumour cells. Although the model is somewhat artificial, a theoretical risk exists, and measures to evacuate surgical smoke efficiently are important. Surgical smoke is potentially hazardous
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College of Medicine > Department of Otorhinolaryngology > 1. Journal Articles

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