Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2588880 International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 2007 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to assess the level of occupational exposure to nitrous oxide (N2O) in operating rooms (ORs), as related to different ventilation and scavenging systems used to remove waste anaesthetic gases from the work environment.MethodsThe monitoring of N2O in the air covered 35 ORs in 10 hospitals equipped with different systems for ventilation and anaesthetic scavenging. The examined systems included: natural ventilation with supplementary fresh air provided by a pressure ventilation system (up to 6 air changes/h); pressure and exhaust ventilation systems equipped with ventilation units supplying fresh air to and discharging contaminated air outside the working area (more than 10 air changes/h); complete air-conditioning system with laminar air flow (more than 15 air changes/h). The measurements were carried out during surgical procedures (general anaesthesia induced intravenously and maintained with inhaled N2O and sevofluran delivered through cuffed endotracheal tubes) with connected or disconnected air scavenging. Air was collected from the breathing zone of operating personnel continuously through the whole time of anaesthesia to Tedlar® bags, and N2O concentrations in air samples were analyzed by adsorption gas chromatography/mass spectrometry.ResultsN2O levels in excess of the occupational exposure limit (OEL) value of 180 mg/m3 were registered in all ORs equipped with ventilation systems alone. The OEL value was exceeded several times in rooms with natural ventilation plus supplementary pressure ventilations and twice or less in those with pressure/exhaust ventilation systems or air conditioning. N2O levels below or within the OEL value were observed in rooms where the system of air conditioning or pressure/exhaust ventilation was combined with scavenging systems. Systems combining natural/pressure ventilation with scavenging were inadequate to maintain N2O concentration below the OEL value.ConclusionAir conditioning and an efficient pressure/exhaust ventilation (above 12 air exchanges/h) together with efficient active scavenging systems are sufficient to sustain N2O exposure in ORs at levels below or within the OEL value of 180 mg/m3.

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Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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