In dental practice, Rotary cutting instruments should preferably not subjected to multiple uses

Written By :  Dr. Shravani Dali
Medically Reviewed By :  Dr. Kamal Kant Kohli
Published On 2023-06-18 14:30 GMT   |   Update On 2023-06-19 06:59 GMT
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The presence of microorganisms and structural damage on the RCIs confirmed that they are not amenable to processing, a fact that characterizes them as a single-use health care product suggests a new study published in The Journal of the American Dental Association.

Rotary cutting instruments (RCIs) are sterilized routinely. The authors aimed to analyze the structural integrity, presence of dirt, and microbial contamination of RCIs used in clinical practice after processing.

Eighty-four RCIs (42 carbide burs, 42 diamond burs) were divided into baseline, control, and test groups. The RCIs were evaluated by means of scanning electron microscopy and microbiological analysis. Evaluation criteria included presence of structural damage, dirt, biofilm, and isolated cells and their phenotypic profile.

Results

The carbide burs from all groups and diamond burs from the test groups had structural damage. Dirt was observed in the baseline and test groups. Three bacterial species were isolated from 4 RCIs (9.52%). An isolated cell was observed from 1 carbide bur. Biofilm was observed on 3 RCIs (7.14%).

RCIs should not be subjected to multiple uses; after the first clinical use they accumulate structural damage and dirt that hampers the cleaning step, causing failure in the sterilization process. The presence of microorganisms and structural damage on the RCIs confirmed that they are not amenable to processing, a fact that characterizes them as a single-use health care product.

Reference:

Biofilm on and structural damage of rotary cutting instruments after 5 cycles of clinical use and processing. Francisco Antonio Uchoa-Junior, Terezinha de Jesus Esteves Barata, Lara Stefânia Netto de Oliveira Leão-Vasconcelos, Evandro Leão Ribeiro, Anaclara Ferreira, Veiga Tipple. The Journal of the American Dental Association. April 28, 2023DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adaj.2023.03.005

Keywords:

Biofilm, structural damage, rotary cutting, instruments, after, 5 cycles, clinical use, processing, Francisco Antonio Uchoa-Junior, Terezinha de Jesus Esteves Barata, Lara Stefânia Netto de Oliveira Leão-Vasconcelos, Evandro Leão Ribeiro, Anaclara Ferreira, Veiga Tipple, The Journal of the American Dental Association, RCIs, subjected, multiple uses

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Article Source : The Journal of the American Dental Association

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