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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 26, 2025

Manufacturing Simple and Inexpensive Soil Surface Temperature and Gravimetric Water Content Sensors
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Cleaning Challenges: Can Extended Soil Dry Times Be Reversed?

Julie Hoover, Mary Ann Drosnock, Christopher Carfaro

    Biomedical Instrumentation & Technology
    |June 21, 2023
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Dried soil on medical devices can be effectively cleaned using an alkaline cleaning agent soak. This method reverses drying effects, ensuring safe reprocessing of reusable medical devices when manufacturer instructions are not followed.

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    Area of Science:

    • Medical Device Reprocessing
    • Infection Control
    • Biomedical Engineering

    Background:

    • Proper cleaning of reusable medical devices is critical for patient safety.
    • Manufacturer instructions for use (IFUs) advise against allowing clinical soil to dry on devices.
    • Dried soil can alter solubility, increasing cleaning difficulty and potentially requiring additional remediation steps.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To evaluate the effectiveness of various remediation conditions for dried soil on surrogate medical devices.
    • To determine if additional cleaning steps can reverse the effects of extended soil drying times.
    • To identify optimal methods for cleaning devices when soil has dried beyond IFU recommendations.

    Main Methods:

    • A solubility test method was employed using surrogate medical devices.
    • Eight different remediation conditions were tested, including water, neutral pH detergents, enzymatic cleaners, alkaline detergents, and enzymatic humectant foam spray.
    • Soaking times varied, with comparisons made between 15-minute and 60-minute soaks.

    Main Results:

    • Only the alkaline cleaning agent effectively solubilized extensively dried soil.
    • A 15-minute soak with an alkaline cleaning agent was as effective as a 60-minute soak.
    • The alkaline cleaning agent successfully reversed the effects of extended soil drying.

    Conclusions:

    • An alkaline cleaning agent soak is an effective additional step for cleaning reusable medical devices with dried soil.
    • This method can reverse the challenges posed by extended soil drying, ensuring effective cleaning.
    • Findings support the use of alkaline cleaning agents to manage dried soil when IFUs are not strictly followed.