Oasis Discussions

Controlling infections and cross contamination in the dental office

This summary is based on the article published in the British Dental Journal: General medicine and surgery for dental practitioners: part 4. Infections and infection control (July 2014)

N. Jakubovics, M. Greenwood and J. G. Meechan

 

 

Context

Infection control and knowledge of common infectious agents is a cornerstone of safe dental practice.

Purpose of the Article

This paper summarises the measures that need to be taken to control cross infection and discusses some of the infectious agents of concern to dental practitioners.

Key Messages

Measures to control cross infection:

Major infectious agents of concern in a dental clinic: 

Blood-borne viruses, such as hepatitis B virus, and HIV aids.

Respiratory viruses, such as common cold (rhinovirus), coronaviruses, respiratory syncytial virus, adenoviruses, influenza, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).

Pseudomonads: gram-negative bacteria responsible for lung infections or for infections of wounds or burns.

Prions: infectious proteins that can nucleate the misfolding of natural proteins in brain tissue.

 

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