Evaluation of a novel waste anaesthetic gas scavenger device for use during recovery from anaesthesia

Summary Volatile anaesthetic agents are a potential occupational health hazard to theatre and recovery staff. Operating theatres and anaesthetic rooms are required to be equipped with scavenging systems, but recovery units often are not. We compared exhaled, spectrophotometric sevoflurane and desflurane concentrations 15 cm from the mouth (‘patient breathing zone’) and 91 cm laterally to the patient (‘nurse work zone’) in 120 patients after tracheal extubation who were consecutively allocated to either ISO‐Gard mask oxygen/scavenging or standard oxygen mask, 0 min, 10 min and 20 min after arrival in the theatre recovery unit. Median (IQR [range]) duration of anaesthesia was similar between groups (control 76 (44–119 [15–484]) min vs. study group 90 (64–130 [15–390]) min, p = 0.136). Using the ISO‐Gard mask, the 20‐min mean patient breathing zone and nurse work zone exhaled anaesthetic levels were ~ 90% and 78% lower than those recorded in the control group, respectively, and were within the recommended 2 ppm maximum environmental exposure limit in the patient breathing zone of 53 out of 60 (88%) and the nurse work zone of all 60 (100%) patients on first measurement in the recovery room (vs. 10 out of 60 (17%) and 40 out of 60 (67%) in the control group). Our study indicates that the ISO‐Gard oxygen/scavenging mask reduces the level of exhaled sevoflurane and desflurane below recommended maximum exposure limits near > 85% of extubated patients within...
Source: Anaesthesia - Category: Anesthesiology Authors: Tags: Original Article Source Type: research