Scientific American Supplement, No. 810, July 11, 1891 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 147 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 810, July 11, 1891.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 810, July 11, 1891 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 147 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 810, July 11, 1891.

The instruments should be similarly scrubbed with hot water and soap, and all particles of blood and pus from any previous operation removed from the joints.  After this they should be immersed for at least fifteen minutes in a solution of beta-naphthol (1:2,500), which must be sufficiently deep to cover every portion of the instruments.  After cleansing the instruments with soap and water, baking in a temperature a little above the boiling point of water is the best sterilizer.  During the operation the sterilized instruments should be kept in a beta-naphthol solution and returned to it when the operator is not using them.

[The antiseptic solutions mentioned here are too irritating for use in operations within the abdomen and pelvis.  Water made sterile by boiling is usually the best agent for irrigating these cavities, and for use on instruments and sponges.  The instruments and sponges must be previously well sterilized.]

Sponges should be kept in a beta-naphthol or a corrosive sublimate solution during the operation.  After the blood from the wound has been sponged away, they should be put in another basin containing the antiseptic solution, and cleansed anew before being used again.  The antiseptic sutures and ligatures should be similarly soaked in beta-naphthol solution during the progress of the operation.

No one should touch the wound but the operator and his first assistant.  No one should touch the sponges but the operator, his first assistant, and the nurse having charge of them.  No one should touch the already prepared ligatures or instruments except the surgeon and his first or second assistants.

None but those assigned to the work are expected to handle instruments, sponges, dressings, etc., during the operation.

When any one taking part in the operation touches an object not sterilized, such as a table, a tray, or the ether towel, he should not be allowed to touch the instruments, the dressings, or the ligatures until his hands have been again sterilized.  It is important that the hands of the surgeon, his assistants, and nurses should not touch any part of his own body, nor of the patient’s body, except at the sterilized seat of operation, because infection may be carried to the wound.  Rubbing the head or beard or wiping the nose requires immediate disinfection of the hands to be practiced.

The trailing ends of ligatures and sutures should never be allowed to touch the surgeon’s clothing or to drag upon the operating table, because such contact may occasionally, though not always, pick up bacteria which may cause suppuration in the wound.

Instruments which fall upon the floor should not be again used until thoroughly disinfected.

The clothing of the patient, in the vicinity of the part to be operated upon, and the blanket and sheets used there to keep him warm, should be covered with dry sublimate towels.  All dressings should be kept safe from infection by being stored in glass jars, or wrapped in dry sublimate towels.

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 810, July 11, 1891 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.