Department of General Surgical Specialties, The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Department of Surgery, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
ANZ J Surg. 2020 Oct;90(10):1857-1862. doi: 10.1111/ans.16242. Epub 2020 Aug 17.
The aim of this study was to identify the current evidence regarding the risk of acquiring viral infections from gases or plumes during intra-abdominal surgery. Peritoneal fluids may contain cellular material and virus particles. Electrocautery smoke and plumes from energy devices may aerosolize harmful substances and viral particles. Insufflation and desufflation during laparoscopic surgery may also aerosolize and distribute biological material. A systematic scoping review was performed to assess the evidence and inform safe surgical practice.
A systematic search of the PubMed and Medline databases was undertaken until June 2020, observing Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses methodology, to identify articles associating viral infection of operating room staff from surgical gases and plumes. All evidence levels were included. The search strategy utilized the search terms 'surgery', 'laparoscopy', 'laparoscopic' 'virus', 'smoke', 'risk', 'infection'.
The literature search identified 74 articles. Eight articles relevant to the subject of this review were included in the analysis, two of which specifically related to intra-abdominal surgery. Of the remaining six, four involved gynaecological surgery and two were in-vitro studies. No evidence that intra-abdominal surgery was associated with an increased risk of acquiring viral infections from exsufflated gas or smoke plumes was identified.
There is currently no evidence that respiratory viruses can be found in the peritoneal fluid. Whilst there is currently no evidence that desufflated carbon dioxide or surgical smoke plumes present a significant infectious risk, there is not a wealth of literature to inform current practice. Further clinical research in this area is required.
本研究旨在确定目前关于在腹腔内手术期间从气体或烟雾中获得病毒感染风险的证据。腹腔液中可能含有细胞物质和病毒颗粒。能量设备的电烙烟雾和烟雾可能使有害物质和病毒颗粒气溶胶化。腹腔镜手术中的充气和放气也可能使生物材料气溶胶化和散布。进行了系统的范围审查,以评估证据并为安全手术实践提供信息。
对 PubMed 和 Medline 数据库进行了系统搜索,直到 2020 年 6 月,遵循系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目方法,以确定与手术室工作人员从手术气体和烟雾中感染病毒相关的文章。包括所有证据水平。搜索策略使用了“手术”、“腹腔镜”、“腹腔镜”、“病毒”、“烟雾”、“风险”、“感染”等搜索词。
文献检索确定了 74 篇文章。纳入了 8 篇与本综述主题相关的文章进行分析,其中 2 篇专门涉及腹腔内手术。在其余的 6 篇中,4 篇涉及妇科手术,2 篇是体外研究。没有证据表明腹腔内手术与从排气或烟雾烟雾中获得病毒感染的风险增加有关。
目前没有证据表明呼吸病毒可以在腹腔液中找到。虽然目前没有证据表明排出的二氧化碳或手术烟雾烟雾存在显著的感染风险,但没有大量的文献来为当前的实践提供信息。需要在这一领域进行进一步的临床研究。