Dental high-speed handpiece and ultrasonic scaler aerosol generation levels and the effect of suction and air supply

Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2023 Jun;44(6):926-933. doi: 10.1017/ice.2022.196. Epub 2022 Aug 8.

Abstract

Objective: Exposure to aerosol spray generated by high-speed handpieces (HSHs) and ultrasonic scalers poses a significant health risk to oral health practitioners from airborne pathogens. Aerosol generation varies with different HSH designs, but to date, no study has measured this.

Materials and methods: We measured and compared aerosol generation by (1) dental HSHs with 3 different coolant port designs and (2) ultrasonic scalers with no suction, low-volume evacuation (LVE) or high-volume evacuation (HVE). Measurements used a particle counter placed near the operator's face in a single-chair, mechanically ventilated dental surgery. Volume concentrations of aerosol, totaled across a 0.3-25-µm size range, were compared for each test condition.

Results: HSH drilling and scaling produced significantly high aerosol levels (P < .001) with total volume concentrations 4.73×108µm3/m3 and 4.18×107µm3/m3, respectively. For scaling, mean volume of aerosol was highest with no suction followed by LVE and HVE (P < .001). We detected a negative correlation with both LVE and HVE, indicating that scaling with suction improved operator safety. For drilling, simulated cavity preparation with a 1-port HSH generated the most aerosol (P < .01), followed by a 4-port HSH. Independent of the number of cooling ports, lack of suction caused higher aerosol volume (1.98×107 µm3/m3) whereas HVE significantly reduced volume to -4.47×105 µm3/m3.

Conclusions: High concentrations of dental aerosol found during HSH cavity preparation or ultrasonic scaling present a risk of infection, confirming the advice to use respiratory PPE. HVE and LVE both effectively reduced aerosol generation during scaling, whereas the new aerosol-reducing 'no air' function was highly effective and can be recommended for HSH drilling.

MeSH terms

  • Aerosols
  • Humans
  • Ultrasonic Therapy*
  • Ultrasonics*

Substances

  • Aerosols