Asepsis and Sterilization in Eye Surgery

Asepsis and Sterilization in Eye Surgery

Asepsis and Sterilization in Eye Surgery

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Asepsis Fundamentals - Sterile Start Secrets

  • Asepsis: Practices preventing microbial contamination in surgical environments; aims to reduce pathogen load.
  • Sterilization: Process eliminating all viable microorganisms, including resilient bacterial spores. Essential for instruments.
  • Core Principles:
    • Strict surgical hand hygiene (scrubbing).
    • Patient skin antisepsis (e.g., 5-10% povidone-iodine).
    • Use of sterile drapes, gowns, gloves.
    • Maintaining an inviolable sterile field.
    • Ensuring instrument sterility (autoclaving, ETO). Surgical Instrument Sterilization Methods

⭐ Preoperative instillation of 5% povidone-iodine into the conjunctival cul-de-sac for at least 3 minutes is a critical step in endophthalmitis prophylaxis.

Pre-Op Protocols - Clean Sweep Crew

  • Patient:
    • Skin: Povidone-iodine (PI) 5-10% (periorbital, allow contact time); PI 0.5-1% (conjunctival sac, e.g., 5% diluted 1:10).
    • Lashes: Clipped or isolated.
    • Antibiotics: Topical (e.g., Moxifloxacin gtts) pre-operatively.
    • Pupil: Mydriasis/miosis as indicated.
  • Team:
    • Scrub: Chlorhexidine 4% or PI 7.5% (timed surgical scrub).
    • Attire: Sterile gown, gloves, mask, cap.
  • OR:
    • Air: Positive pressure, HEPA filters (≥0.3 µm, 99.97% efficiency).
    • Surfaces: Cleaned and disinfected.
    • Instruments: Autoclaved and confirmed sterile.

⭐ Conjunctival sac irrigation with 0.5-1% Povidone-iodine (e.g., 5% PI diluted 1:10) for ≥30 seconds contact is a critical step to significantly ↓ endophthalmitis risk. (📌 PI Shield!)

Betadine 5% Ophthalmic Prep Solution

Instrument Sterilization - Germ Warfare Gear

  • Goal: Eradicate all microbes (spores too) to prevent endophthalmitis.
  • Heat Sterilization Methods:
    • Autoclave (Moist Heat):
      • Standard: 121°C, 15 psi, 15-30 min.
      • Flash (emergency): 134°C, 3 min.
      • Use: Most metals; avoid delicate/sharp.
    • Dry Heat (Hot Air Oven):
      • Temperatures: 160°C for 2 hrs or 170°C for 1 hr.
      • Use: Sharps (less dulling), oils, powders.
  • Chemical Sterilization (Cold Methods):
    • Ethylene Oxide (ETO) Gas:
      • Process: Low temp (30-60°C); for heat/moisture-sensitive (IOLs, cryoprobes).
      • Caution: Toxic, requires long aeration.
    • Hydrogen Peroxide Gas Plasma (e.g., Sterrad):
      • Process: Low temp (<50°C), rapid cycle.
      • Use: Delicate, heat-sensitive. Not for cellulose, liquids.
    • Glutaraldehyde (2-4% solution):
      • Sterilization: 6-10 hrs immersion.
      • Use: Heat-sensitive items; rinse thoroughly.
  • Radiation Sterilization:
    • Method: Gamma rays, industrial use for disposables (e.g., IOLs, sutures).

⭐ Prions (CJD) need enhanced protocols: Autoclave 134°C (18-60 min) or 1N NaOH soak + autoclave.

Intra-Op Asepsis - No-Bug Zone Ops

  • Maintain strict sterile field; address any breach immediately.
  • Minimize OR traffic; only essential personnel present.
  • Employ "no-touch" technique for instruments and IOLs.
  • Isolate surgical site with impervious drapes.
  • Utilize positive pressure ventilation and HEPA air filtration.
  • Gentle wound irrigation with Balanced Salt Solution (BSS). Operating room setup for eye surgery

⭐ Intraoperative povidone-iodine 0.05% to 0.25% irrigation of the conjunctival sac can further reduce bacterial load during surgery for endophthalmitis prophylaxis.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Povidone-iodine (5-10%) is crucial for ocular surface antisepsis before surgery.
  • Autoclaving (121°C, 15 psi, 15-20 min) is gold standard for surgical instrument sterilization.
  • Ethylene Oxide (ETO) sterilizes heat-sensitive materials like IOLs and plastics.
  • Preoperative topical antibiotics significantly reduce postoperative endophthalmitis incidence.
  • Strict adherence to aseptic techniques (e.g., hand scrubbing, sterile gowning, draping) is mandatory.
  • TASS (Toxic Anterior Segment Syndrome) is sterile inflammation linked to sterilization/solution errors, distinct from endophthalmitis.

Practice Questions: Asepsis and Sterilization in Eye Surgery

Test your understanding with these related questions

In postoperative intensive care unit, five patients developed postoperative wound infection on the same day. The best method to prevent cross infection occurring in other patients in the same ward is to:

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Flashcards: Asepsis and Sterilization in Eye Surgery

1/10

The most important factor in the prevention of postoperative endophthalmitis is preoperative preparation with _____.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

The most important factor in the prevention of postoperative endophthalmitis is preoperative preparation with _____.

povidone iodine

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