Background: Exposure to the particulate matter produced in underground railway systems is arousing increasing scientific interest because of its health effects. The aim of our study was to evaluate the airborne concentrations of PM10 and three sub-fractions of PM2.5 in an underground railway system environment in proximity to platforms and in underground commercial areas within the system, and to compare these with the outdoor airborne concentrations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Our aim was to evaluate the impact of aerators on water microbiological contamination in at-risk hospital departments, with a view to quantifying the possible risk of patient exposure to waterborne microorganisms.
Design: We analyzed the microbiological and chemical-physical characteristics of hot and cold water in some critical hospital departments.
Setting: Two hospitals in northern Italy.
Several studies have proposed that the microbiological quality of the air in operating theatres be indirectly evaluated by means of particle counting, a technique derived from industrial clean-room technology standards, using airborne particle concentration as an index of microbial contamination. However, the relationship between particle counting and microbiological sampling has rarely been evaluated and demonstrated in operating theatres. The aim of the present study was to determine whether particle counting could predict microbiological contamination of the air in an operating theatre during 95 surgical arthroplasty procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii (MDRAB) is an important cause of hospital acquired infection. We describe a 7-month outbreak of a MDRAB infection involving various wards of an Italian hospital and an investigation of the possible source of the infection was conducted.
Methods: A baumannii was isolated from various biological samples from 22 colonized or infected patients, and was identified and characterized for its antibiotic sensitivity.
Background: Many dental procedures produce extensive aerosols and splatters that are routinely contaminated with microorganisms.
Methods: Air containing blood-bearing aerosols and surfaces contaminated by sedimenting blood particulate was sampled in 5 different dental cubicles. To assess contamination by blood particulate, the concentration of hemoglobin (Hb) in the air and on the sedimentation surfaces was determined.
The potential harmful effects of glutaraldehyde on human health are well known, and in recent years various new substitutes for this compound have been proposed for the disinfection and thorough sterilization of medical instruments. Nevertheless, glutaraldehyde is still widely used in hospital environments. In order to evaluate environmental contamination by glutaraldehyde vapours, the rooms of a hospital out-patient department of digestive endoscopy were monitored in 2005; a total of 52 samples were taken.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study evaluated the percentage of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strains with reduced susceptibility to glycopeptides in four intensive care units (ICU) by means of environmental sampling of air and representative surfaces. The total bacterial count was taken and possible S. aureus strains were subsequently isolated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA total of 1,030 microbiological samples were taken in 3 hospital wards with different air-conditioning features: no conditioning system (ward A), a conditioning system equipped with minimum efficiency reporting value (MERV) filters (ward B), and a conditioning system thoroughly maintained and equipped with high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters (absolute) (ward C). The air in each ward was sampled, and the bacterial and fungal concentrations were determined by active and passive methods. The concentration of fungi on surfaces was also determined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA cross-sectional study was carried out on two groups of subjects differently exposed to nitrogen dioxide in order to test the urinary hydroxyproline ratio (UHP/mg/24 h/m(2)) as a biomarker of effect after exposure to this pollutant. UHP was determined in samples of 58 subjects divided into two groups comparable to as lifestyle and training. The first group was composed of 29 subjects who used to do jogging in urban areas polluted by nitrogen dioxide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF