Tofte Josef N, Caldwell Lindsey S
University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation.
Iowa Orthop J. 2017;37:189-192.
While the true incidence of retained foreign bodies after surgery is unknown, it has been approximated at 1:5,500 operations overall, with substantially less frequency in hand and upper extremity procedures. Despite the rarity of foreign body retention in hand and upper extremity surgery, universal radiofrequency scanning for electronically-tagged sponges and automatic radiographic evaluation for incorrect sponge counts are employed for all surgical procedures at our institution. We demonstrate the infeasibility of retaining an operative sponge of a standard size in commonly performed hand and upper extremity procedures with incision sizes of two centimeters or less, and establish that visual detection of sponges in these cases is adequate.
Eighteen trigger finger releases, five carpal tunnel releases, three trigger thumb releases, and three de Quervain's tenosynovitis releases were successfully performed upon five cadaveric specimens by residents under supervision of fellowship-trained hand surgeons for a total of 29 two-centimeter or smaller incisions. Randomized surgical sponge placement was evaluated by a blinded observer at two distances and incision sizes were quantified. Kappa values were calculated to determine the acuity of visual detection versus the actual presence of a sponge.
The maximum length of the standard surgical sponge that could be contained within an incision was three centimeters. When compared with the gold standard (whether the sponge had been placed or not by the operating resident), the placement of a standard surgical sponge could be detected correctly in 100% of cases at both "across the room" and "at the table" distances, for kappa values of 1.0 and 1.0 respectively. This did not vary with incision size or surgical procedure.
The added cost and time from radiofrequency detection of retained sponges and radiographic evaluation in the event of incorrect sponge counts can be safely eliminated if sponges can be reliably visually detected.
This cadaveric study informs patient safety practices by demonstrating that visual detection of surgical sponges is adequate for certain upper extremity procedures.
虽然手术后异物残留的真实发生率尚不清楚,但据估计总体手术中约为1:5500,在手和上肢手术中发生率则低得多。尽管在手和上肢手术中异物残留很少见,但我们机构对所有手术均采用通用的电子标签海绵射频扫描以及对不正确的海绵计数进行自动放射学评估。我们证明了在切口尺寸为两厘米或更小的常见手和上肢手术中,保留标准尺寸的手术海绵是不可行的,并确定在这些情况下目视检查海绵就足够了。
在接受专科培训的手外科医生监督下,住院医师在五个尸体标本上成功进行了18例扳机指松解术、5例腕管松解术、3例扳机拇松解术和3例桡骨茎突狭窄性腱鞘炎松解术,共29个两厘米或更小的切口。由一名不知情的观察者在两个距离评估随机放置的手术海绵,并对切口尺寸进行量化。计算kappa值以确定目视检测与海绵实际存在情况的敏锐度。
切口内可容纳的标准手术海绵的最大长度为三厘米。与金标准(住院医师是否放置了海绵)相比,在“房间对面”和“手术台旁”两个距离处,标准手术海绵的放置在100%的病例中都能被正确检测到,kappa值分别为1.0和1.0。这与切口大小或手术方式无关。
如果能够可靠地通过目视检测海绵,那么在海绵残留检测中使用射频以及在海绵计数不正确时进行放射学评估所增加的成本和时间可以安全地消除。
这项尸体研究表明,在某些上肢手术中,目视检测手术海绵就足够了,为患者安全实践提供了依据。