Resources Subcategory: Sterile Gloves

How are gloves sterilised?

The most common method is using gamma irradiation, whereby products are exposed to gamma radiation which penetrates the packaging and kills all microorganisms. Gamma processing does not cause any significant rise in temperature or leave behind any chemical residue.

What is bioburden?

Bioburden is the total number of viable (live) microbes on a packaged item prior to sterilisation. This includes bacteria, yeasts and fungi.

What is a Sterilisation Assurance Level or SAL?

SAL is the expected probability of an item being non-sterile after exposure to a valid sterilisation process. The normal SAL for medical devices is 10-3 (one in a thousand) for less critical devices and 10-6 (one in a million) for more critical and invasive devices. Surgical gloves are sterilised at 10-6 SAL.

What does SAL 10⁻⁶ mean?

A Sterility Assurance Level of 10-6 means that for every 1,000,000 items sterilised, there may be one that contains viable microorganism that have survived the sterilisation process. The SAL is a statistical probability that is used because it is impossible to prove that all viable microorganism have been killed during the sterilisation process. In practice …

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What is dose setting?

Dose setting is the process undertaken to establish the level of radiation exposure (dose) required to destroy microorganisms (bioburden) on a product within a specified safety level (Sterilisation Assurance Level—SAL). The process includes a determination of the number of organisms on the packaged, unsterilised product, followed by irradiation at a dose calculated to kill 90% …

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What are endotoxins?

Endotoxins are potent inflammatory agents produced by the cell walls of gram-negative bacteria. They are capable of causing multiple local and systemic reactions including irritation, fever, tissue inflammation, diarrhoea, respiratory distress, and endotoxic shock. They are not destroyed by steam, ethylene oxide or irradiation sterilisation. Endotoxins are also adjuvants, a term applied to substances that …

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What is a pyrogen?

A pyrogen is a fever producing substance. Endotoxins are pyrogens, although producing a fever is only one of the physiological consequences of endotoxin. Pyrogenicity, like the other consequences of endotoxin depends on the level and rate of introduction. Very low levels will not cause a fever. Higher levels increase the number and severity of potential …

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Does sterilisation remove endotoxins?

No. The ethylene oxide, steam and radiation sterilisation processes used for gloves do not destroy endotoxins. These forms of sterilisation destroy microorganisms. Upon destruction, endotoxins, the pyrogenic lipopolysaccharides from the cell walls of dead gram negative bacteria, are released from the cell wall and remain capable of causing multiple local and systemic pathological conditions. It …

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Do surgical gloves have endotoxins?

Whether or not surgical gloves possess significant levels of endotoxin depends on the manufacture practices of each lot or batch. Some gloves have enough endotoxin for one pair to elicit a fever and initiate endotoxin related complications noted previously. Others have undetectable levels. Endotoxin activity is rate and dose related; the level is significant. Because …

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