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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 56, 108-110, Copyright © 1993 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
PS Wong, VK Young, A Youhana and JE Wright
A new method of detecting occult glove punctures was devised to determine
its frequency during cardiac operations. Glove puncture is of relevance to
the transmission of infectious diseases and the potential contamination of
implanted cardiac prostheses. A study was therefore carried out in 48 adult
patients undergoing open heart operations in which gloves worn by surgeons
and nurses were collected and evaluated at the end of each procedure. In 22
of these cases, gloves were changed at three different stages of the
cardiac operation for the principal operators: stage I, skin incision to
commencement of cardiopulmonary bypass; stage II, cardiopulmonary bypass to
sternotomy closure; and stage III, sternotomy closure to skin closure. One
hundred sixty-two gloves (31.5%) had one or more punctures out of a total
of 514 gloves tested. Only 20 glove punctures were recognized either at the
time or at the end of the operation. There were 185 occult glove punctures.
The majority (60%) of punctures were on the nondominant hand, with 30% of
perforations located in the nondominant index finger. Using the chi 2 test
with two degrees of freedom, there is no significant difference between the
glove perforation rates for the principal operators in stages I, II, and
III. The most important finding from this study was that 61% of gloves worn
by scrub nurses had one or more punctures compared with 23.6% of surgeons.
ARTICLES
Surgical glove punctures during cardiac operations
Department of Surgery, London Chest Hospital, England.
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