Assessment of the durability of medical examination gloves |
| |
Authors: | Kerr Lesley N Chaput Maria P Cash Lisa D O'Malley Louis G Sarhrani Elmiloudi M Teixeira Joseph C Boivin William S Mailhot Seth A |
| |
Affiliation: | US Food and Drug Administration, Winchester, Massachusetts 01890, USA. lesley.kerr@fda.gov |
| |
Abstract: | This study determined the durability of various types of medical examination gloves using a laboratory test developed by the researchers. Results of this testing are compared with a simulated clinical method, also developed by the researchers, found to produce failures at rates similar to actual clinical use. Ten types of exam gloves were tested. One set of gloves was tested using a glove durability method. A second set was worn and conditioned using a simulated clinical method for comparison. The third set consisted of a control set of gloves that were not stressed. Samples consisted of 100 gloves combined from 2 or 4 manufacturers. All gloves were water-leak tested as the last step. The glove durability method created failures at similar rates to the simulated clinical method. The majority of the defects were located in the finger regions of the gloves. Durability of powdered and powder-free vinyl gloves was inferior to that of other glove types tested, with failure rates ranging from 24% to 42%, compared with 3% to 17% for the other glove types tested. Glove durability was also affected by the powdered state of the gloves and the user having long fingernails. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|