Aerosol generation related to respiratory interventions and the effectiveness of a personal ventilation hood.

Forbes McGain, Ruhi S Humphries, Jung Hoon Lee, Robyn Schofield, Craig French, Melita D Keywood, Louis Irving, Kevin Kevin, Jim Patel, Jason Monty
Author Information
  1. Forbes McGain: Western Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. Forbes.McGain@wh.org.au.
  2. Ruhi S Humphries: Climate Science Centre, CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
  3. Jung Hoon Lee: Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
  4. Robyn Schofield: School of Earth Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
  5. Craig French: Western Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
  6. Melita D Keywood: Climate Science Centre, CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
  7. Louis Irving: Respiratory Medicine, Melbourne Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
  8. Kevin Kevin: Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
  9. Jim Patel: Energy, CSIRO, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
  10. Jason Monty: Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To quantify aerosol generation from respiratory interventions and the effectiveness of their removal by a personal ventilation hood.
DESIGN AND SETTING: Determination of the aerosol particle generation (in a single, healthy volunteer in a clean room) associated with breathing, speaking, wet coughing, oxygen (O) 15 L/min via face mask, O 60 L/min via nasal prongs, bilevel non-invasive positive-pressure ventilation (BiPAP) and nebulisation with O 10 L/min.
INTERVENTIONS: Aerosol generation was measured with two particle sizer and counter devices, focusing on aerosols 0.5-5 μm (human-generated aerosols), with and without the hood. An increase from baseline of less than 0.3 particles per mL was considered a low level of generation.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Comparisons of aerosol generation between different respiratory interventions. Effectiveness of aerosol reduction by a personal ventilation hood.
RESULTS: Results for the 0.5-5 μm aerosol range. Quiet breathing and talking demonstrated very low increase in aerosols (< 0.1 particles/mL). Aerosol generation was low for wet coughing (0.1 particles/mL), O 15 L/min via face mask (0.18 particles/mL), and high flow nasal O 60 L/min (0.24 particles/mL). Non-invasive ventilation generated moderate aerosols (29.7 particles/mL) and nebulisation very high aerosols (1086 particles/mL); the personal ventilation hood reduced the aerosol counts by 98% to 0.5 particles/mL and 8.9 particles/mL respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: In this human volunteer study, the administration of O 15 L/min by face mask and 60 L/min nasal therapy did not increase aerosol generation beyond low levels. Non-invasive ventilation caused moderate aerosol generation and nebulisation therapy very high aerosol generation. The personal ventilation hood reduced the aerosol counts by at least 98%.

References

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MeSH Term

Administration, Inhalation
Aerosols
Humans
Lung
Masks
Oxygen
Respiration
Treatment Outcome

Chemicals

Aerosols
Oxygen

Word Cloud

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