There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
To the Editor: Clinicians with inadequate access to standard personal protective equipment
(PPE) have been compelled to improvise protective barrier enclosures for use during
endotracheal intubation. We describe one such barrier that is easily fabricated and
may help protect clinicians during this procedure. The barrier studied was an “aerosol
box,”
1
which consists of a transparent plastic cube designed to cover a patient’s head and
that incorporates two circular ports through which the clinician’s hands are passed
to perform the airway procedure. The dimensions of the box are provided in the Supplementary
Appendix, available with the full text of this letter at NEJM.org.
In our simulation (see video), a laryngoscopist, attired in standard PPE, took position
at the head of an airway mannequin. To approximate a forceful cough and generate a
spread of droplets and aerosols, a small latex balloon containing 10 ml of fluorescent
dye was placed in the hypopharynx of the mannequin. The balloon was inflated with
compressed oxygen that was run through tubing inside the mannequin until the balloon
burst; the explosion of the balloon represented a crude simulation of a cough. We
repeated the experiment without and with the aerosol box, and after each simulation,
we illuminated the scene with ultraviolet light to visualize the spreading of the
dye.
With the use of PPE only, dye was found on the laryngoscopist’s gown, gloves, face
mask, eye shield, hair, neck, ears, and shoes (Figure 1). Contamination of the floor
occurred within approximately 1 m from the head of the bed and also on a monitor located
more than 2 m away. When we repeated the experiment with the aerosol box, the simulated
cough resulted in contamination of only the inner surface of the box and the laryngoscopist’s
gloves and gowned forearms. Examination of the laryngoscopist and the room with ultraviolet
light showed no macroscopic contamination outside the box.
Our simulation method, although pragmatic, was not validated for the projectile direction,
speed, or turbulence of a true cough, nor did it match the particle-size distribution.
Droplets were overproduced as compared with aerosols. Our method of detection could
not identify very small quantities of material that could be infectious. Nevertheless,
we suggest that our ad hoc barrier enclosure provided a modicum of additional protection
and could be considered to be an adjunct to standard PPE. A caveat: we found that
the box restricted hand movement and would require training before use in the treatment
of patients. Operators should be ready to abandon use of the box should airway management
prove difficult.