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INFECTION CONTROL IN
DENTISTRY
CONTENTS
 Introduction
 Mode of Transmission
 Mode of Infection control
 Objective of Infection control
 Operatory Asepsis
 Personal Protection Barrier
 Sterilization
 Disinfection
 Laboratory Infection Control
 Clinical Waste Disposal.
2
Definitions
• INFECTION CONTROL – Also called
“exposure control plan” by OSHA is a
required office program that is
designed to protect personnel
against risks of exposure to infection.
3
STERILIZATION:
•Use of a physical or chemical
procedure to destroy all
microorganisms including substantial
numbers of resistant bacterial spores.
4
• Sterilization means the destruction of all life
forms. (Ronald B Luftig).
• Sterilization is the process of killing or
removing all viable organisms. (MIMS –
PLAYFAIR)
5
• STERILE:
–Free from all living microorganisms;
usually described as a probability (e.g.,
the probability of a surviving
microorganism being 1 in 1 million).
6
DISINFECTION:
•Destruction of pathogenic and other kinds
of microorganisms by physical or chemical
means.
7
• Disinfection is less lethal than sterilization,
because it destroys the majority of recognized
pathogenic microorganisms, but not
necessarily all microbial forms (e.g., bacterial
spores).
• Disinfection is a process of removing or killing
most, but not all, viable organisms.
8
• DISINFECTANT: A chemical agent used on
inanimate objects to destroy virtually all
recognized pathogenic microorganisms,
but not necessarily all microbial forms
(e.g., bacterial endospores).
9
• ASEPSIS: prevention of microbial
contamination of living tissues or sterile
materials by excluding, removing or killing
microorganisms.
10
 Direct contact with blood or body fluids
 Indirect contact with a contaminated
instrument or surface
 Contact of mucosa of the eyes, nose, or
mouth with droplets or spatter
 Inhalation of airborne microorganisms
Modes of Diseases Transmission
11
MODES OF TRANSMISSION:
Six links in chain of transmission of infection
Chain of
infection
Infectious
agent
Reservoirs
Portal of
exit
Means of
transmission
Portal of
entry
Susceptible
host
12
OBJECTIVES OF INFECTION CONTROL
Reduce
Implement
Simplify
Protect
13
Why , Who and what
Why is infection control necessary in dentistry ?
•Dental staff and patients may be exposed to a wide
variety of pathogenic microorganisms .
14
• Who is responsible for infection control
in the dental office ?
– Each member of the dental team must follow the
recommended guidelines .
15
• What should be done to prevent the
transmission of disease in the dental office ?
16
The most effective ways to prevent the
transmission of diseases includes :
1) Hand washing
2) Gloves
3) Face masks
4) Protective eye wear
5) Protective clothing
6) Instrument sterilization and disinfection
17
Diseases Transmission in Dental Office
The dental office should have an infection control
program to prevent the transmission of disease from
the following :
Patient to dental team
Dental team to patient
Patient to patient
Dental office to community ( include dental team’s
family )
Community to dental office to patient
Diseases Transmission in Dental Office
18
•To prevent such infections, following is a list
of all those procedures and precautions that
together constitute infection control.
19
20
•These guidelines should be followed each
time treatment is performed because we
are never certain of the patient's status,
either because they themselves do not
know or because they have chosen not to
inform their healthcare providers of their
condition.
•Following these guidelines for every
patient is called "Standard Precautions".
1. Immunization
2. Patient screening
3. Hand washing
4. Barrier techniques -
• Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
• Rubber dam, Pre-procedural rinsing
5. Needle & sharp instrument safety
• Occupational Exposure To Blood/Body Fluids
6.Instruments sterilization and disinfection
7.Surface disinfection
8. Radiographic asepsis
9. Laboratory asepsis
10.Infectious dental waste management & disposal
Standard Precautions
21
Personal protective equipment ( PPE )
•OSHA requires the employer to provide employees
with appropriate personal protective equipment .
•Examples of PPE:
1- Protective clothing
2- Surgical masks
3- Face shields
4- Protective eyewear
5- Disposable patient treatment gloves
6- Heavy-duty utility gloves
22
These PPE must be used whenever you :
 Performing tasks that could produce
splash or spatter .
 Any contact with body fluids
 Perform other clinical activities that
require handling contaminated items e.g.
radiographs , impressions , dentures or
contaminated equipment and surfaces .
23
HAND HYGIENE
Hand washing is the single most important
procedure for preventing the spread of
infection. So , you must wash your hands each
time before you put on gloves and immediately
after you remove gloves .
24
• Hand washing is also required if you touch
contaminated instruments or surfaces during
working
• We should always use liquid soap during hand
washing . Bar soap should never be used
because it may transmit contamination.
25
• Visibly dirty
• After touching
contaminated objects with
bare hands
• Before and after patient
treatment (before glove
placement and after glove
removal)
HANDS NEED TO BE CLEANED WHEN
OPERATORY ASEPSIS
• In the dental operatory, environmental
surfaces (i.e., a surface or equipment that
does not contact patients directly) can
become contaminated during patient care.
27
• Certain surfaces, especially ones touched
frequently (e.g., light handles, unit switches,
and drawer knobs) can serve as reservoirs of
microbial contamination, although they have
not been associated directly with transmission
of infection to either personnel or patients.
28
• Transfer of microorganisms from
contaminated environmental surfaces to
patients occurs primarily through personnel
hand contact
29
A. Infection Control During the
Pretreatment Period
• The process of infection control begins during
the period of preparation for clinical treatment.
• Paying attention to infection control at this time
has several payoffs.
30
• In addition to reducing the risk of
transmission of infectious agents during
patient care, thinking ahead will make the
treatment session more efficient and will also
make the post treatment infection control
process easier and more effective.
31
1. Remove unnecessary items from
the dental procedure area : The
dental procedure area should be
arranged to facilitate a thorough
cleaning following each patient.
32
2. Preplan the materials needed during
treatment.
- Set out all instruments, medications,
impression materials, and other items that
are needed for a procedure.
- Thinking ahead minimizes the need to
search for additional items or to enter
cabinets and drawers once gloves have
become contaminated.
33
3. Utilize disposable items whenever possible:
The use of disposable items saves time during
cleanup and decontamination and solves the
problem of proper reprocessing.
34
• 4. Use prearranged tray set-ups for routine or
frequently performed procedures.
–Helps to eliminate the need to go into
cabinets once you have started a procedure.
35
5.Use individualized, sterilized bur blocks for
each procedure
• Using individualized bur blocks containing only
the burs required for that procedure helps to
eliminate the contamination of other, unneeded
burs and to make clean-up easier.
36
6. If indicated, have the rubber dam setup on
the tray.
When a rubber dam will be used during a clinical
procedure, it also should be included on the tray
setup. In addition, include those items needed
for high-velocity evacuation.
37
7. Identify those items that will become contaminated
during treatment.
• While preparing the dental procedure area prior to
beginning a clinical procedure, consider which items will
become contaminated during treatment.
• Examples of such surfaces include countertops, light
handles, X-ray unit heads, tray tables etc.
• Decide whether to use a barrier, e.g., plastic wrap to
prevent contamination of these surfaces and items or to
disinfect them when the procedure is complete.
38
Surface barriers :
• Surface barriers are used to
prevent contamination on the
surface underneath.
• All the surface barriers
should be resistant to fluids in
order to prevent
microorganisms in saliva,
blood, and other liquids from
soaking through the barrier
and reach the surface
underneath.
Chair Drapes
39
40
41
42
8. Review patient records before initiating
treatment and place radiographs on the
view box.
• Do not leave the record on the countertop
or handle it after beginning treatment.
• Place the record in a drawer or out of the
dental procedure area, so that it doesn’t
become contaminated.
• Entries into the record should be done
before and after the procedure.
43
44
9. Prepare personnel involved in patient
care.
• An essential pretreatment procedure is the
preparation of all personnel involved in
patient care.
• This includes the utilization of personal
protective equipment (gown, eyewear, mask
and gloves) and hand hygiene.
45
46
B. Infection Control during the treatment
Period (Chairside Infection Control ) :
The infection control procedures described in
the previous period will help you to reduce
the risk of transmission of infectious agents.
During treatment there are additional
precautions that can be taken to further
reduce infection risks.
47
1. Use care when receiving, handling, or
passing sharp instruments
2. Take special precautions with syringes and
needles.
3. Use a rubber dam whenever possible
4. Avoid touching unprotected switches,
handles and other equipment once gloves
have been contaminated.
5. Avoid entering cabinets once gloves have
been contaminated.
48
49
50
 Continue to wear personal protective equipment
during clean-up: After patient care is completed,
begin the cleaning and disinfection process by
removing contaminated gloves used during
treatment, wash your hands and use the utility
gloves before beginning the clean up. Continue
to wear protective eyewear, mask, and gown.
C. Infection Control During the Post-
Treatment Period
51
 Remove all disposable barriers : All of the
barriers placed before treatment, including
light handle covers and countertop barriers,
should be removed.
 Clean and disinfect all items not protected
by barriers.
52
 Cleaning and disinfection of the dental
treatment room surfaces are important
components in an effective infection
control program
 The laboratory studies have proved that
microorganisms may survive on
environmental surfaces for long time . For
example, Mycobacterium tuberculosis
may survive for weeks
53
54
STERILIZATION AND DISINFECTION OF
DENTAL INSTRUMENTS
DENTAL INSTRUMENTS
Classification based on risk of transmission and
need of sterilization
-CRITICAL
-SEMI-CRITICAL
-NON-CRITICAL
56
CRITICAL INSTRUMENTS
• Penetrate MUCOUS MEMBRANES or CONTACT
BONE, BLOODSTREAM, or other normally sterile
tissues
• HEAT STERILIZE between uses or use sterile single-
use, DISPOSABLE devices
• Examples include SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS,
SCALPEL BLADES, PERIODONTAL SCALERS, AND
SURGICAL DENTAL BURS
57
SEMI-CRITICAL INSTRUMENTS
• Contact MUCOUS MEMBRANES but do NOT
PENETRATE SOFT TISSUE
• HEAT STERILIZE or HIGH-LEVEL DISINFECT
• Examples: DENTAL MOUTH MIRRORS,
AMALGAM CONDENSERS, AND DENTAL
HANDPIECES
58
NONCRITICAL INSTRUMENTS
AND DEVICES
• Contact intact SKIN
• Clean and disinfect using a LOW TO
INTERMEDIATE LEVEL DISINFECTANT
• Examples: X-RAY HEADS, FACEBOWS, PULSE
OXIMETER, BLOOD PRESSURE CUFF
59
STERILIZATION
• Stages for instrument sterilization:
1. Presoaking
2. Cleaning
3. Corrosion control and lubrication
4. Packaging
5. Sterilization
6. Handling sterile instruments
7. Storage
8. Distribution
60
Agents used in sterilization
• Physical agents:
1. Sunlight
2. Drying
3. Dryheat: flaming, incineration, hot air
4. Moist heat: pasteurization, boiling, steam under
pressure, steam under normal pressure.
5. Filtration: candles asbestos pads, membranes
6. Radiation
7. Ultrasonic and sonic vibrations
61
62
• Chemical agents:
1. Alcohols: ethyl, isopropyl, trichlorobutanol
2. Aldehydes: formaldehyde, glutaraldehyde
3. Dyes
4. Halogens
5. Phenols
6. Surface-active agents
7. Metallic salts
8. Gases: ethylene oxide, formaldehyde, beta
propiolactone.
The 4 accepted METHODS OF
STERILIZATION are:
• Steam pressure sterilization (autoclave)
• Chemical vapor pressure sterilization-
(chemiclave)
• Dry heat sterilization (dryclave)
• Ethylene oxide sterilization
63
AUTOCLAVE
• Sterilization with STEAM UNDER PRESSURE
• Time required at 1210 C is 15 mins at 15 lbs of
pressure.
Advantages
• Rapid and effective
• Effective for sterilizing cloth surgical
packs and towel packs
Disadvantages
• Items sensitive to heat cannot be sterilized
• It tends to corrode carbon steel burs
and instruments
64
CHEMICLAVING
Sterilization by CHEMICAL VAPOR UNDER
PRESSURE
• operates at 1310 C and 20 lbs of pressure.
• They have a cycle time of half an hour.
65
• Advantages
• Carbon steel and other carbon sensitive burs,
instruments and pliers are sterilized without rust
or corrosion
• Disadvantages
• Items sensitive to elevated temperature will be
damaged
• Instruments must be very lightly packed.
• Towel and heavy clothing cannot be sterilized.
66
67
Dry Heat Sterilization
Conventional dry heat ovens:
• Achieved at temperature above 1600 C.
• Have heated chambers that allow air to circulate by gravity
flow.
• 6-12mins is required for sterilization
68
• Disadvantages
• Without careful calibration, more chances
sterilization failures
–The most accurate way to calibrate a
sterilization cycle is by using external
temperature gauge (pyrometer) attached to
a thermocouple wire.
69
70
ETHYLENE OXIDE STERILIZATION (ETO)
MOBILE
FUMIGATOR
71
• Advantages:
1. Operates effectively
at low temperatures
2. Gas is extremely
penetrative
3. Can be used for
sensitive equipment
like handpieces.
4. Sterilization is
verifiable
• Disadvantages:
1. Potentially
mutagenic and
carcinogenic.
2. Requires aeration
chamber ,cycle time
lasts hours
3. Usually only hospital
based.
72
Sterilization Monitoring
Types of Indicators
• Mechanical
–Measure time, temperature, pressure
• Chemical
–Change in color when physical
parameter is reached
• Biological (spore tests)
–Use biological spores to assess the
sterilization process directly
STERILIZATION METHOD SPORE TYPE INCUBATION TEMPERATURE
AUTOCLAVE Bacillus stearothemophilus 56°C
CHEMICAL VAPOR
DRY HEAT Bacillus subtilis 37°C
ETHYLENE OXIDE
Gamma radiation B. Pumilus E601 370C
 Sterilization monitoring has four components:
1. a sterilization indicator on the instrument bag,
stamped with the date it is sterilized,
2. daily color-change process-indicator strips,
3. weekly biologic spore test, and
4. documentation notebook.
74
STORAGE AND CARE OF STERILE
INSTRUMENTS
• Storage areas should be dust proof, dry,
well ventilated and easily accessible for
routine dental use.
• Sterile materials should be stored atleast
8-10 inches from the floor, atleast 18
inches from the ceiling, and atleast 2
inches from the outside walls.
75
• Items are not stored in any location where
they can become wet.
• Items should be positioned so that
packaged items are not crushed, bent,
crushed, compressed or punctured.
• Outside shipping containers and
corrugated cartons should not be used as
containers in sterile storage areas.
• Ultra violet chambers and formalin
chambers are now commonly used for
storage of instruments.
76
DISINFECTION OF DENTAL UNIT AND
ENVIRONMENTAL SURFACES
77
DISINFECTION
• Disinfection is always at least a two-step
procedure:
• The initial step involves vigorous scrubbing of
the surfaces to be disinfected and wiping
them clean.
• The second step involves wetting the surface
with a disinfectant and leaving it wet for the
time prescribed by the manufacturer.
78
• The ideal disinfectant has the following
properties:
1. Broad spectrum of activity
2. Acts rapidly
3. Non corrosive
4. Environment friendly
5. Is free of volatile organic compounds
6. Nontoxic & nonstaining
79
• High-level disinfection: Disinfection
process that inactivates vegetative
bacteria, mycobacteria, fungi, and
viruses but not necessarily high
numbers of bacterial spores.
80
Intermediate-level disinfection:
Disinfection process that inactivates
vegetative bacteria, the majority of
fungi, mycobacteria, and the majority of
viruses (particularly enveloped viruses)
but not bacterial spores.
81
• Low-level disinfectant: Liquid chemical
germicide. OSHA requires low-level
hospital disinfectants also to have a label
claim for potency against HIV and HBV.
• Gigasept which contains
succindialdehyde and
dimethoxytetrahydrofuran are used for
disinfection of plastic and rubber
materials eg: dental chair
82
BASICS OF LABORATORY IC
• Need COORDINATION between DENTAL OFFICE
AND LAB
• Use of proper methods/materials for handling
and decontaminating soiled incoming items
• All contaminated INCOMING ITEMS should be
cleaned and DISINFECTED before being
HANDLED BY LAB PERSONNEL, and before
being returned to the patient
83
84
INCOMING ITEMS
• Rinse under running tap
water to remove
blood/saliva
• Disinfect as appropriate
• Rinse thoroughly with tap
water to remove residual
disinfectant
• No single disinfectant is
ideal or compatible with
all items 85
OUTGOING ITEMS
• Clean and disinfect before
delivery to patient
• After disinfection: rinse and
place in plastic bag with
diluted mouthwash until
insertion
• Do not store in disinfectant
before insertion
• Label the plastic bag: “This
case shipment has been
disinfected with ______ for
_____ minutes”
86
REFERENCES:
• Operative dentistry, infection control, 4th
edition, sturdevent.
• Sterilization and disinfection of dental
instruments by ADA
• Disinfection & sterilization of dental
instruments TB MED 266, 1995
• CDC, guidelines for disinfection &
sterilization in health care facilities 2008.
• CDC guidelines for infection control in dental
health care settings, Dec19, 2003/vol.52.
87

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Infection control in dentistry

  • 2. CONTENTS  Introduction  Mode of Transmission  Mode of Infection control  Objective of Infection control  Operatory Asepsis  Personal Protection Barrier  Sterilization  Disinfection  Laboratory Infection Control  Clinical Waste Disposal. 2
  • 3. Definitions • INFECTION CONTROL – Also called “exposure control plan” by OSHA is a required office program that is designed to protect personnel against risks of exposure to infection. 3
  • 4. STERILIZATION: •Use of a physical or chemical procedure to destroy all microorganisms including substantial numbers of resistant bacterial spores. 4
  • 5. • Sterilization means the destruction of all life forms. (Ronald B Luftig). • Sterilization is the process of killing or removing all viable organisms. (MIMS – PLAYFAIR) 5
  • 6. • STERILE: –Free from all living microorganisms; usually described as a probability (e.g., the probability of a surviving microorganism being 1 in 1 million). 6
  • 7. DISINFECTION: •Destruction of pathogenic and other kinds of microorganisms by physical or chemical means. 7
  • 8. • Disinfection is less lethal than sterilization, because it destroys the majority of recognized pathogenic microorganisms, but not necessarily all microbial forms (e.g., bacterial spores). • Disinfection is a process of removing or killing most, but not all, viable organisms. 8
  • 9. • DISINFECTANT: A chemical agent used on inanimate objects to destroy virtually all recognized pathogenic microorganisms, but not necessarily all microbial forms (e.g., bacterial endospores). 9
  • 10. • ASEPSIS: prevention of microbial contamination of living tissues or sterile materials by excluding, removing or killing microorganisms. 10
  • 11.  Direct contact with blood or body fluids  Indirect contact with a contaminated instrument or surface  Contact of mucosa of the eyes, nose, or mouth with droplets or spatter  Inhalation of airborne microorganisms Modes of Diseases Transmission 11
  • 12. MODES OF TRANSMISSION: Six links in chain of transmission of infection Chain of infection Infectious agent Reservoirs Portal of exit Means of transmission Portal of entry Susceptible host 12
  • 13. OBJECTIVES OF INFECTION CONTROL Reduce Implement Simplify Protect 13
  • 14. Why , Who and what Why is infection control necessary in dentistry ? •Dental staff and patients may be exposed to a wide variety of pathogenic microorganisms . 14
  • 15. • Who is responsible for infection control in the dental office ? – Each member of the dental team must follow the recommended guidelines . 15
  • 16. • What should be done to prevent the transmission of disease in the dental office ? 16
  • 17. The most effective ways to prevent the transmission of diseases includes : 1) Hand washing 2) Gloves 3) Face masks 4) Protective eye wear 5) Protective clothing 6) Instrument sterilization and disinfection 17
  • 18. Diseases Transmission in Dental Office The dental office should have an infection control program to prevent the transmission of disease from the following : Patient to dental team Dental team to patient Patient to patient Dental office to community ( include dental team’s family ) Community to dental office to patient Diseases Transmission in Dental Office 18
  • 19. •To prevent such infections, following is a list of all those procedures and precautions that together constitute infection control. 19
  • 20. 20 •These guidelines should be followed each time treatment is performed because we are never certain of the patient's status, either because they themselves do not know or because they have chosen not to inform their healthcare providers of their condition. •Following these guidelines for every patient is called "Standard Precautions".
  • 21. 1. Immunization 2. Patient screening 3. Hand washing 4. Barrier techniques - • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) • Rubber dam, Pre-procedural rinsing 5. Needle & sharp instrument safety • Occupational Exposure To Blood/Body Fluids 6.Instruments sterilization and disinfection 7.Surface disinfection 8. Radiographic asepsis 9. Laboratory asepsis 10.Infectious dental waste management & disposal Standard Precautions 21
  • 22. Personal protective equipment ( PPE ) •OSHA requires the employer to provide employees with appropriate personal protective equipment . •Examples of PPE: 1- Protective clothing 2- Surgical masks 3- Face shields 4- Protective eyewear 5- Disposable patient treatment gloves 6- Heavy-duty utility gloves 22
  • 23. These PPE must be used whenever you :  Performing tasks that could produce splash or spatter .  Any contact with body fluids  Perform other clinical activities that require handling contaminated items e.g. radiographs , impressions , dentures or contaminated equipment and surfaces . 23
  • 24. HAND HYGIENE Hand washing is the single most important procedure for preventing the spread of infection. So , you must wash your hands each time before you put on gloves and immediately after you remove gloves . 24
  • 25. • Hand washing is also required if you touch contaminated instruments or surfaces during working • We should always use liquid soap during hand washing . Bar soap should never be used because it may transmit contamination. 25
  • 26. • Visibly dirty • After touching contaminated objects with bare hands • Before and after patient treatment (before glove placement and after glove removal) HANDS NEED TO BE CLEANED WHEN
  • 27. OPERATORY ASEPSIS • In the dental operatory, environmental surfaces (i.e., a surface or equipment that does not contact patients directly) can become contaminated during patient care. 27
  • 28. • Certain surfaces, especially ones touched frequently (e.g., light handles, unit switches, and drawer knobs) can serve as reservoirs of microbial contamination, although they have not been associated directly with transmission of infection to either personnel or patients. 28
  • 29. • Transfer of microorganisms from contaminated environmental surfaces to patients occurs primarily through personnel hand contact 29
  • 30. A. Infection Control During the Pretreatment Period • The process of infection control begins during the period of preparation for clinical treatment. • Paying attention to infection control at this time has several payoffs. 30
  • 31. • In addition to reducing the risk of transmission of infectious agents during patient care, thinking ahead will make the treatment session more efficient and will also make the post treatment infection control process easier and more effective. 31
  • 32. 1. Remove unnecessary items from the dental procedure area : The dental procedure area should be arranged to facilitate a thorough cleaning following each patient. 32
  • 33. 2. Preplan the materials needed during treatment. - Set out all instruments, medications, impression materials, and other items that are needed for a procedure. - Thinking ahead minimizes the need to search for additional items or to enter cabinets and drawers once gloves have become contaminated. 33
  • 34. 3. Utilize disposable items whenever possible: The use of disposable items saves time during cleanup and decontamination and solves the problem of proper reprocessing. 34
  • 35. • 4. Use prearranged tray set-ups for routine or frequently performed procedures. –Helps to eliminate the need to go into cabinets once you have started a procedure. 35
  • 36. 5.Use individualized, sterilized bur blocks for each procedure • Using individualized bur blocks containing only the burs required for that procedure helps to eliminate the contamination of other, unneeded burs and to make clean-up easier. 36
  • 37. 6. If indicated, have the rubber dam setup on the tray. When a rubber dam will be used during a clinical procedure, it also should be included on the tray setup. In addition, include those items needed for high-velocity evacuation. 37
  • 38. 7. Identify those items that will become contaminated during treatment. • While preparing the dental procedure area prior to beginning a clinical procedure, consider which items will become contaminated during treatment. • Examples of such surfaces include countertops, light handles, X-ray unit heads, tray tables etc. • Decide whether to use a barrier, e.g., plastic wrap to prevent contamination of these surfaces and items or to disinfect them when the procedure is complete. 38
  • 39. Surface barriers : • Surface barriers are used to prevent contamination on the surface underneath. • All the surface barriers should be resistant to fluids in order to prevent microorganisms in saliva, blood, and other liquids from soaking through the barrier and reach the surface underneath. Chair Drapes 39
  • 40. 40
  • 41. 41
  • 42. 42
  • 43. 8. Review patient records before initiating treatment and place radiographs on the view box. • Do not leave the record on the countertop or handle it after beginning treatment. • Place the record in a drawer or out of the dental procedure area, so that it doesn’t become contaminated. • Entries into the record should be done before and after the procedure. 43
  • 44. 44
  • 45. 9. Prepare personnel involved in patient care. • An essential pretreatment procedure is the preparation of all personnel involved in patient care. • This includes the utilization of personal protective equipment (gown, eyewear, mask and gloves) and hand hygiene. 45
  • 46. 46
  • 47. B. Infection Control during the treatment Period (Chairside Infection Control ) : The infection control procedures described in the previous period will help you to reduce the risk of transmission of infectious agents. During treatment there are additional precautions that can be taken to further reduce infection risks. 47
  • 48. 1. Use care when receiving, handling, or passing sharp instruments 2. Take special precautions with syringes and needles. 3. Use a rubber dam whenever possible 4. Avoid touching unprotected switches, handles and other equipment once gloves have been contaminated. 5. Avoid entering cabinets once gloves have been contaminated. 48
  • 49. 49
  • 50. 50
  • 51.  Continue to wear personal protective equipment during clean-up: After patient care is completed, begin the cleaning and disinfection process by removing contaminated gloves used during treatment, wash your hands and use the utility gloves before beginning the clean up. Continue to wear protective eyewear, mask, and gown. C. Infection Control During the Post- Treatment Period 51
  • 52.  Remove all disposable barriers : All of the barriers placed before treatment, including light handle covers and countertop barriers, should be removed.  Clean and disinfect all items not protected by barriers. 52
  • 53.  Cleaning and disinfection of the dental treatment room surfaces are important components in an effective infection control program  The laboratory studies have proved that microorganisms may survive on environmental surfaces for long time . For example, Mycobacterium tuberculosis may survive for weeks 53
  • 54. 54
  • 55. STERILIZATION AND DISINFECTION OF DENTAL INSTRUMENTS
  • 56. DENTAL INSTRUMENTS Classification based on risk of transmission and need of sterilization -CRITICAL -SEMI-CRITICAL -NON-CRITICAL 56
  • 57. CRITICAL INSTRUMENTS • Penetrate MUCOUS MEMBRANES or CONTACT BONE, BLOODSTREAM, or other normally sterile tissues • HEAT STERILIZE between uses or use sterile single- use, DISPOSABLE devices • Examples include SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS, SCALPEL BLADES, PERIODONTAL SCALERS, AND SURGICAL DENTAL BURS 57
  • 58. SEMI-CRITICAL INSTRUMENTS • Contact MUCOUS MEMBRANES but do NOT PENETRATE SOFT TISSUE • HEAT STERILIZE or HIGH-LEVEL DISINFECT • Examples: DENTAL MOUTH MIRRORS, AMALGAM CONDENSERS, AND DENTAL HANDPIECES 58
  • 59. NONCRITICAL INSTRUMENTS AND DEVICES • Contact intact SKIN • Clean and disinfect using a LOW TO INTERMEDIATE LEVEL DISINFECTANT • Examples: X-RAY HEADS, FACEBOWS, PULSE OXIMETER, BLOOD PRESSURE CUFF 59
  • 60. STERILIZATION • Stages for instrument sterilization: 1. Presoaking 2. Cleaning 3. Corrosion control and lubrication 4. Packaging 5. Sterilization 6. Handling sterile instruments 7. Storage 8. Distribution 60
  • 61. Agents used in sterilization • Physical agents: 1. Sunlight 2. Drying 3. Dryheat: flaming, incineration, hot air 4. Moist heat: pasteurization, boiling, steam under pressure, steam under normal pressure. 5. Filtration: candles asbestos pads, membranes 6. Radiation 7. Ultrasonic and sonic vibrations 61
  • 62. 62 • Chemical agents: 1. Alcohols: ethyl, isopropyl, trichlorobutanol 2. Aldehydes: formaldehyde, glutaraldehyde 3. Dyes 4. Halogens 5. Phenols 6. Surface-active agents 7. Metallic salts 8. Gases: ethylene oxide, formaldehyde, beta propiolactone.
  • 63. The 4 accepted METHODS OF STERILIZATION are: • Steam pressure sterilization (autoclave) • Chemical vapor pressure sterilization- (chemiclave) • Dry heat sterilization (dryclave) • Ethylene oxide sterilization 63
  • 64. AUTOCLAVE • Sterilization with STEAM UNDER PRESSURE • Time required at 1210 C is 15 mins at 15 lbs of pressure. Advantages • Rapid and effective • Effective for sterilizing cloth surgical packs and towel packs Disadvantages • Items sensitive to heat cannot be sterilized • It tends to corrode carbon steel burs and instruments 64
  • 65. CHEMICLAVING Sterilization by CHEMICAL VAPOR UNDER PRESSURE • operates at 1310 C and 20 lbs of pressure. • They have a cycle time of half an hour. 65
  • 66. • Advantages • Carbon steel and other carbon sensitive burs, instruments and pliers are sterilized without rust or corrosion • Disadvantages • Items sensitive to elevated temperature will be damaged • Instruments must be very lightly packed. • Towel and heavy clothing cannot be sterilized. 66
  • 67. 67
  • 68. Dry Heat Sterilization Conventional dry heat ovens: • Achieved at temperature above 1600 C. • Have heated chambers that allow air to circulate by gravity flow. • 6-12mins is required for sterilization 68
  • 69. • Disadvantages • Without careful calibration, more chances sterilization failures –The most accurate way to calibrate a sterilization cycle is by using external temperature gauge (pyrometer) attached to a thermocouple wire. 69
  • 70. 70
  • 71. ETHYLENE OXIDE STERILIZATION (ETO) MOBILE FUMIGATOR 71
  • 72. • Advantages: 1. Operates effectively at low temperatures 2. Gas is extremely penetrative 3. Can be used for sensitive equipment like handpieces. 4. Sterilization is verifiable • Disadvantages: 1. Potentially mutagenic and carcinogenic. 2. Requires aeration chamber ,cycle time lasts hours 3. Usually only hospital based. 72
  • 73. Sterilization Monitoring Types of Indicators • Mechanical –Measure time, temperature, pressure • Chemical –Change in color when physical parameter is reached • Biological (spore tests) –Use biological spores to assess the sterilization process directly
  • 74. STERILIZATION METHOD SPORE TYPE INCUBATION TEMPERATURE AUTOCLAVE Bacillus stearothemophilus 56°C CHEMICAL VAPOR DRY HEAT Bacillus subtilis 37°C ETHYLENE OXIDE Gamma radiation B. Pumilus E601 370C  Sterilization monitoring has four components: 1. a sterilization indicator on the instrument bag, stamped with the date it is sterilized, 2. daily color-change process-indicator strips, 3. weekly biologic spore test, and 4. documentation notebook. 74
  • 75. STORAGE AND CARE OF STERILE INSTRUMENTS • Storage areas should be dust proof, dry, well ventilated and easily accessible for routine dental use. • Sterile materials should be stored atleast 8-10 inches from the floor, atleast 18 inches from the ceiling, and atleast 2 inches from the outside walls. 75
  • 76. • Items are not stored in any location where they can become wet. • Items should be positioned so that packaged items are not crushed, bent, crushed, compressed or punctured. • Outside shipping containers and corrugated cartons should not be used as containers in sterile storage areas. • Ultra violet chambers and formalin chambers are now commonly used for storage of instruments. 76
  • 77. DISINFECTION OF DENTAL UNIT AND ENVIRONMENTAL SURFACES 77
  • 78. DISINFECTION • Disinfection is always at least a two-step procedure: • The initial step involves vigorous scrubbing of the surfaces to be disinfected and wiping them clean. • The second step involves wetting the surface with a disinfectant and leaving it wet for the time prescribed by the manufacturer. 78
  • 79. • The ideal disinfectant has the following properties: 1. Broad spectrum of activity 2. Acts rapidly 3. Non corrosive 4. Environment friendly 5. Is free of volatile organic compounds 6. Nontoxic & nonstaining 79
  • 80. • High-level disinfection: Disinfection process that inactivates vegetative bacteria, mycobacteria, fungi, and viruses but not necessarily high numbers of bacterial spores. 80
  • 81. Intermediate-level disinfection: Disinfection process that inactivates vegetative bacteria, the majority of fungi, mycobacteria, and the majority of viruses (particularly enveloped viruses) but not bacterial spores. 81
  • 82. • Low-level disinfectant: Liquid chemical germicide. OSHA requires low-level hospital disinfectants also to have a label claim for potency against HIV and HBV. • Gigasept which contains succindialdehyde and dimethoxytetrahydrofuran are used for disinfection of plastic and rubber materials eg: dental chair 82
  • 83. BASICS OF LABORATORY IC • Need COORDINATION between DENTAL OFFICE AND LAB • Use of proper methods/materials for handling and decontaminating soiled incoming items • All contaminated INCOMING ITEMS should be cleaned and DISINFECTED before being HANDLED BY LAB PERSONNEL, and before being returned to the patient 83
  • 84. 84
  • 85. INCOMING ITEMS • Rinse under running tap water to remove blood/saliva • Disinfect as appropriate • Rinse thoroughly with tap water to remove residual disinfectant • No single disinfectant is ideal or compatible with all items 85
  • 86. OUTGOING ITEMS • Clean and disinfect before delivery to patient • After disinfection: rinse and place in plastic bag with diluted mouthwash until insertion • Do not store in disinfectant before insertion • Label the plastic bag: “This case shipment has been disinfected with ______ for _____ minutes” 86
  • 87. REFERENCES: • Operative dentistry, infection control, 4th edition, sturdevent. • Sterilization and disinfection of dental instruments by ADA • Disinfection & sterilization of dental instruments TB MED 266, 1995 • CDC, guidelines for disinfection & sterilization in health care facilities 2008. • CDC guidelines for infection control in dental health care settings, Dec19, 2003/vol.52. 87