National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Occup Environ Hyg. 2011 Dec;8(12):729-39. doi: 10.1080/15459624.2011.627294.
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health is conducting a first-of-its-kind study that will assess respirator fit and facial dimension changes as a function of time and improve the scientific basis for decisions on the periodicity of fit testing. A representative sample of 220 subjects wearing filtering-facepiece respirators (FFR) will be evaluated to investigate factors that affect changes in respirator fit over time. The objective of this pilot study (n = 10) was to investigate the variation in fit test data collected in accordance with the study protocol. Inward leakage (IL) and filter penetration were measured for each donned respirator, permitting the calculation of face seal leakage (FSL) and fit factor (FF). The study included only subjects who (a) passed one of the first three fit tests (FF ≥ 100), and (b) demonstrated through a series of nine donnings that they achieved adequate fit (90th percentile FSL was ≤ 0.05). Following the respirator fit tests, 3-D scans of subjects were captured, and height, weight, and 13 traditional anthropometric facial dimensions were measured. The same data were collected 2 and 4 weeks after baseline. The mean change in FSL for the 10 subjects was 0.044% between Visits 1 and 2, and was 0.229% between Visits 1 and 3. Technicians achieved at least moderate reliability for all manual measurements except nose protrusion. Filter penetration was generally less than 0.03%. Geometric mean fit factors were not statistically different among the three visits. The large variability was observed with different respirator samples for the same model, between subjects (inter), and within each subject (intra). Although variability was observed, adequate fit was maintained for all 10 subjects. Pilot scans collected show subject faces remained the same over the 4 weeks. The consistent results during the pilot study indicate that the methods and procedures are appropriate for the 3-year main study. In addition, this baseline fit change data will be compared with future fit changes to determine if the changes are meaningful.
美国国家职业安全与健康研究所正在进行一项首例研究,旨在评估呼吸器适配度和面部尺寸随时间的变化,并为呼吸器定期适配度测试决策提供更科学的依据。将对 220 名佩戴过滤式面罩呼吸器(FFR)的代表性受试者进行评估,以研究影响呼吸器随时间适配度变化的因素。这项初步研究(n = 10)的目的是根据研究方案,调查拟合测试数据的变化。对每个佩戴的呼吸器进行内部泄漏(IL)和过滤穿透测试,从而计算面罩密封泄漏(FSL)和适配因子(FF)。该研究仅包括以下受试者:(a)通过前三次适配度测试中的一次(FF≥100);(b)通过一系列九次佩戴证明他们达到了足够的适配度(第 90 百分位 FSL≤0.05)。在完成呼吸器适配度测试后,对受试者进行了 3D 扫描,并测量了身高、体重和 13 项传统人体面部尺寸。基线后 2 周和 4 周时收集了相同的数据。在 10 名受试者中,FSL 的平均变化在第 1 次和第 2 次访问之间为 0.044%,在第 1 次和第 3 次访问之间为 0.229%。除了鼻尖突出度,技术人员对手动测量的所有数据都达到了至少中等可靠性。过滤穿透率通常小于 0.03%。三次访问中,几何平均值适配因子没有统计学差异。在同一样品的不同呼吸器之间(组间)和每个受试者之间(组内)观察到很大的可变性。尽管存在变异性,但所有 10 名受试者都保持了足够的适配度。收集的初步扫描显示,在 4 周内,受试者的面部保持不变。初步研究中的一致结果表明,该方法和程序适用于为期 3 年的主要研究。此外,将把这些基础适配度变化数据与未来的适配度变化进行比较,以确定变化是否有意义。