Define:
Sepsis
Asepsis
Antisepsis
Define antiseptic, disinfectant and sterilization
post-operative infections what is the new challenge and main problems
What are the 4 sources of contamination during surgery
What are the 4 non-sterile barriers and 3 sterile barriers
NON-STERILE BARRIERS 1. Scrub suits 2. Surgical head covers 3. Face masks 4. Shoes and shoes covers STERILE BARRIERS 1. Surgical gown 2. Sterile gloves - susceptible to tearing and punctures 3. Sterile drapes
What are the 2 different types of surgical gowns and drapes
1) Reusable:
○ Typically woven 50/50 Polyester/cotton -> woven so have larger holes for bacteria
○ Holes need to be repaired via a heat sealed patch.
○ Should be treated to make them waterproof
2) Single use: - BEST OPTION
○ Synthetic - Non-woven
○ The use of disposable gowns decreases contamination and infection rates.
What is the goal of surgical site preparation and the 6 considerations for a good antiseptic solution
What are the 3 common antiseptics for skin preparation and their characteristics
1) Chlorhexidine gluconate
- G+/G- bacteria, viruses and fungi NOT sporicidal
- residual action (6 hours), not inactivated by organic materal, diluted in wounds 0.05%
- not compatible with iodine
2) Povidone-iodine
- bactericidal, fungicidal, virucidal may be sporicidal
- low residual activity, inactivated by organic material
- high incidence of skin reactions
3) alcohols
- ○ Most RAPID and effective antibacterial antiseptic (including MRSA & MRSP)
○ Bactericidal, fungicidal, variable against viruses and ineffective against spores.
○ Most effective at 70%
○ Evaporates very quickly - minimal residual effect so never used ALONE
○ Tissue necrosis in open wounds
Hair removal for surgery preparation what is important
What are the 3 key steps
What are the 3 main aims of surgical hand scrub
What are the 2 types of hand scrubs and what is considered the best
What is the sterile zone on a gown and what is the only thing that can touch it
Draping what is teh sequence and how to drape a limb
What is the most important thing in terms of theatre etiquette and the order to process and sterilise instruments
sealing and labelling instruments before autoclaving what is involved
- Sealing: ○ Autoclave tape ○ Heat sealing: for paper bags and laminates - Labelling ○ Not ball point pens ○ Not on paper packaging ○ Include the following information: § Date of sterilization § Expiry date § Instrument type Staff member initials
List 6 methods of sterilization
Autoclaves why used, and how works
What is shelf life related to
What is the most common towel clamp, what used for and is it used at melbourne uni
What are the 6 suture material characteristics
Monofilament vs multifilament what are the advantages and disadvantages and which is preferred
Monofilament: preferred - Less pliable - Poorer handling, increased memory - Less tissue drag - Less knot security, more knots required. Multifilament: - Greater strength and pliability - Improved handling compared to monofilament - Increased capillarity - Increased tendency for bacterial colonization - Avoid in contaminated environments - Greater tissue drag - Increased knot security
What makes a suture absorable and what is the purpose of sutures
Absorbable are those that absorb within body tissue under 120 days and do not require removal, whilst nonabsorbable sutures retain their strength until they are removed.
What are the 2 most common monofilament and 1 multifilament sutures and their properties
PDS, PDS II – synthetic, absorbable, general closure, significant memory - GO TO MOST COMMON Monocryl – synthetic absorbable, similar to Biosyn.
Multifilament
1. Catgut – absorbable, excessive tissue reaction. Better suture available.