Abstract
Laparoscopic surgery has been suggested to pose a risk of infection to the surgical team due to aerosol and gas leakage during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. However, there have been no studies on the risk of gas and aerosol leakage in laparoscopic surgery. We aimed to answer the question "Is the aerosol and gas leakage in laparoscopy is hazardous in terms of coronavirus infection?" with this study. In this study, gas and aerosol leaks were documented by simulating the entry and exit maneuvers from a trocar during laparoscopic surgery using a high-speed camera, fog, and laser in a model representing the abdomen. The maximum gas and aerosol leakage were found during wet gauze extraction from the 10 mm trocar, and its velocity reached 7.5 m/s. The fastest aerosol leakage rate was observed when a 5 mm grasper was extracted from the 5 mm trocar. The results of the subsequent trials were consistent with these values. Higher leakage speeds were observed than the velocity of the exhaled air in a resting person. The surgical crew members, who work very close to the trocars and each other, are at serious risk of infection with COVID-19 which can spread as fast as exhalation speed through trocars. Since there is an evident risk of infection for the surgical crew from laparoscopic surgery of a patient whose intraabdominal fluids are infected with COVID-19, patients must be evaluated elaborately for COVID-19 preoperatively and infected patients should undergo surgery conventionally.
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More From: European review for medical and pharmacological sciences
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