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Background: Electrosurgery is used in almost all surgeries. The entire surgical team working in these operating rooms is exposed to surgical smoke. In the literature, there is no study examining the direct effect of surgical smoke on operating room staff and involving the entire surgical team in sampling.
Materials and Methods: This experimental-type study was conducted in the operating room of the Department of General Surgery of a University Hospital. In the study, the surgeries were completed with standard practice and four different protective measures that could affect surgical smoke exposure. Blood and urine samples were collected from the surgical team before and after the surgery. Consequently, 70 blood and 70 urine samples were collected. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to compare pre- and post-operative analyses.
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2.3 Collection of Study Data 2.3.1 Data Collection Tools The Surgery Data Collection Form, which was created by the researchers in line with the relevant literature (Romano et al. 2016, 2017, Ragde et al. 2014; Tseng et al. 2014, Lin et al. 2010, Hollmann et al. 2004) to evaluate the information about the surgery, was used to collect the data. Other data collection tools were the N95 and safety equipment, the RapidVac™ Smoke Evacuator system for smoke evacuation, as well as the pencil type (smoke extractor) and smoke tubing evacuators.
2.3.2 Data Collection Method Blood and urine samples of the surgical team were collected before the total mastectomy in five different situations listed below that may affect surgical smoke exposure.
After the surgery is completed with routine applications (without taking any measures for smoke evacuation), After completing the surgery with the use of special safety equipment (N95 mask, safety glasses and without any measures for smoke evacuation), After the evacuation of the smoke caused by the surgery with a wall-mounted aspirator, After the evacuation of the smoke caused by the surgery with a smoke tubing and After the evacuation of the smoke caused by the surgery with a smoke evacuation pencil.
The blood samples were kept in a transport bag that maintained the temperature range between 2 and 4 °C until they reached the laboratory and kept at -20 °C for analysis. Blood samples were evaluated in the laboratory for benzene, toluene, xylene and styrene.
Similarly, the urine samples were kept in a transport bag that maintained the temperature range between 2 and 4 °C until they reached the laboratory and kept at -20 °C for analysis. The urine samples were evaluated in terms of urinary metabolites benzene-phenol-TT muconic acid, toluene-hippuric acid-O, cresol, xylene-hippuric acid and phenol-phenol in the laboratory.
Blood and urine analysis in the study was performed by the Central Research Test and Analysis Laboratory Application and Research Center of the university of this study.
2.3.3 Evaluation and Analysis of Data The study data was evaluated using the IBM SPSS Statistics 25.0 Statistics program. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to compare pre- and post-operative analyses. Moreover, 0.05 was accepted as significant.
Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry was used for the analysis of blood and urine samples of the surgical team.
2.4 Ethical Aspect of Study Permission (11.01.2018-E.11195) was obtained from the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of the university of this study. Also, written permission (29.01.2018-E27595) from the institution where the research was conducted as well as informed written consent from the participants in the study were obtained.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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