학술논문

Cytosponge procedures produce fewer respiratory aerosols and droplets than esophagogastroduodenoscopies.
Document Type
Article
Source
Diseases of the Esophagus. Mar2024, Vol. 37 Issue 3, p1-5. 5p.
Subject
*AEROSOLS
*MASS spectrometers
*PARTICLE analysis
*ATOMIZERS
Language
ISSN
1120-8694
Abstract
Esophagogastroduodenoscopies (EGD) are aerosol-generating procedures that may spread respiratory pathogens. We aim to investigate the production of airborne aerosols and droplets during Cytosponge procedures, which are being evaluated in large-scale research studies and National Health Service (NHS)implementation pilots to reduce endoscopy backlogs. We measured 18 Cytosponge and 37 EGD procedures using a particle counter (diameters = 0.3–25 μm), taking measurements 10 cm from the mouth. Two particle count analyses were performed: whole procedure and event-based. Direct comparison with duration-standardized EGD procedures shows that Cytosponge procedures produce 2.16× reduction (P  < 0.001) for aerosols and no significant change for droplets (P =  0.332). Event-based analysis shows that particle production is driven by throat spray (aerosols: 138.1× reference, droplets: 16.2×), which is optional, and removal of Cytosponge (aerosols: 14.6×, droplets: 62.6×). Cytosponge burping produces less aerosols than EGD (2.82×, P  < 0.05). Cytosponge procedures produce significantly less aerosols and droplets than EGD procedures and thus reduce two potential transmission routes for respiratory viruses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]