Friedrich M G, Tirilomis T, Kollmeier J M, Wang Y, Hanekop G G
Department of Thoracic, Cardiac and Vascular Surgery, University Medical Center Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.
Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, Germany.
Surg Res Pract. 2018 Nov 21;2018:3074819. doi: 10.1155/2018/3074819. eCollection 2018.
Suction devices for clearing the surgical field are among the most commonly used tools of every surgeon because a better view of the surgical field is essential. Forced suction may produce disturbingly loud noise, which acts as a nonnegligible stressor. Especially, in emergency situations with heavy bleeding, this loud noise has been described as an impeding factor in the medical decision-making process. In addition, there are reports of inner ear damage in patients due to suction noises during operations in the head area. These problems have not been solved yet. The purpose of this study was to analyse flow-dependent suction noise effects of different surgical suction tips. Furthermore, we developed design improvements to these devices.
We compared five different geometries of suction tips using an in vitro standardised setup. Two commercially available standard suction tips were compared to three adapted new devices regarding their flow-dependent (10-2000 mL/min) noise emission (dB, weighting filter (A), distance 10 cm) and acoustic quality of resulting noises (Hamilton fast Fourier analysis) during active suction at the liquid-air boundary. Noise maps at different flow rates were created for all five suction devices, and the proportion of extracted air was measured. The geometries of the three custom-made suction tips (new models 1, 2, and 3) were designed considering the insights after determining the key characteristics of the two standard suction models.
The geometry of a suction device tip has significant impact on its noise emission. For the standard models, the frequency spectrum at higher flow rates significantly changes to high-frequency noise patterns (>3 kHz). A number of small side holes designed to prevent tissue adhesion lead to increased levels of high-frequency noise. Due to modifications of the tip geometry in our new models, we are able to achieve a highly significant reduction of noise level at low flow rates (new model 2 vs. standard models < 0.001) and also the acoustic quality improved. Additionally, we attain a highly significant reduction of secondary air intake (new model 2 vs. the other models < 0.001).
Improving flow-relevant features of the geometry of suction heads is a suitable way to reduce noise emissions. Optimized suction tips are significantly quieter. This may help us to reduce noise-induced hearing damage in patients as well as stress of medical staff during surgery and should lead to quieter operation theatres overall. Furthermore, the turbulence reduction and reduced secondary air intake during the suction process are expected to result in protective effects on the collected blood and thus could improve the quality of autologous blood retransfusions. We are on the way to evaluate potential benefits.
用于清理手术视野的吸引装置是每位外科医生最常用的工具之一,因为清晰的手术视野至关重要。强制吸引可能会产生令人不安的巨大噪音,这是一个不可忽视的压力源。特别是在大出血的紧急情况下,这种巨大噪音被认为是医疗决策过程中的一个阻碍因素。此外,有报道称在头部区域手术期间,患者因吸引噪音而导致内耳损伤。这些问题尚未得到解决。本研究的目的是分析不同手术吸引头的流量相关吸引噪音影响。此外,我们对这些装置进行了设计改进。
我们使用体外标准化装置比较了五种不同几何形状的吸引头。将两种市售标准吸引头与三种改进的新装置在液体 - 空气界面进行主动吸引时的流量相关(10 - 2000毫升/分钟)噪音排放(分贝,加权滤波器(A),距离10厘米)以及产生噪音的声学质量(汉密尔顿快速傅里叶分析)进行了比较。为所有五个吸引装置创建了不同流速下的噪音图,并测量了抽取空气的比例。在确定了两种标准吸引模型的关键特征后,根据相关见解设计了三种定制吸引头(新模型1、2和3)的几何形状。
吸引装置头部的几何形状对其噪音排放有显著影响。对于标准模型,较高流速下的频谱会显著变为高频噪音模式(>3千赫)。一些用于防止组织粘连的小侧孔会导致高频噪音水平增加。由于我们新模型中头部几何形状的改进,我们能够在低流速下实现噪音水平的高度显著降低(新模型2与标准模型相比<0.001),并且声学质量也得到了改善。此外,我们还实现了二次进气的高度显著降低(新模型2与其他模型相比<0.001)。
改善吸引头几何形状中与流量相关的特征是降低噪音排放的一种合适方法。优化后的吸引头明显更安静。这可能有助于我们减少患者因噪音导致的听力损伤以及手术期间医护人员的压力,并应使手术室总体上更安静。此外,预计吸引过程中湍流的减少和二次进气的降低对收集的血液有保护作用,从而可以提高自体血液回输的质量。我们正在评估潜在的益处。