Abstract

High-frequency jet ventilation (HFJV) is used in pneumological endoscopy for rigid, diagnostic, and therapeutic bronchoscopies. It is unclear to what extent the unobstructed flow of respiratory gas from the patient's lungs causes microbial contamination of the surrounding air. After the start of the HFJV (15 min) in 16 rigid bronchoscopies, airborne pathogen measurements were taken directly at the distal endoscope outlet, at examiner height (40 cm above the endoscope outlet), at a 2 m distance from the endoscope in the room and at the supply air outlet of the examination room using an RCS air sampler. The number and type of pathogens isolated in the air samples were then determined, as well as germs in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) from the patient's lungs. An increased bacterial density (136 and 114 CFU/m3) was detected directly at the distal end of the endoscope and at examiner height at a distance of 40 cm, which decreased significantly with increasing distance from the bronchoscope (98 CFU/m3 at a distance of 2 m and 82 CFU/m3 at the supply air outlet). The most frequently detected bacteria were Staphylococcus spp., Micrococcus spp. and Bacillus spp. In the BALF, pathogens could only be cultivated in four of 16 samples, but the same pathogens were detected in the BALF and the ambient air. When performing a rigid bronchoscopy, in which patients are mechanically ventilated in a controlled manner using an open HFJV system, there is an increased pathogen load in the ambient air and therefore a potential risk for the examiner.

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