Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05210920

RBG: Regular, Bare, Gel: Does Type of Nail Polish Affect Bacterial Counts After Surgical Scrubbing?

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
53 (actual)
Sponsor
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Purpose: The purpose of this study is to evaluate if type of nail polish (gel polish or regular polish) has an effect on the number of bacterial colonies on finger nails after surgical scrubbing. Participants: The potential participants are healthcare providers with patient interaction. Exclusion criteria include evidence of active dermatitis or other skin abnormalities, or allergy to chlorhexidine. Intervention: Participants will have gel nail polish applied to one finger of their dominant hand, and regular polish applied to another finger of their dominant hand. Bacterial swabs will be collected from these two fingers, as well as the from the adjacent finger with no nail polish. Specimen collection will occur both before and after scrubbing with surgical soap. Bacterial counts will be compared between the three groups to determine the association between the presence of nail polish and nail polish type on bacterial counts after surgical scrubbing. Specimen collection will not take place during scrubbing for actual patient care.

Detailed description

Potential participants will be identified by word of mouth, flyers and institutional networking. Once a participant agrees to enroll, they will have each type of nail polish placed on a single finger on their dominant hand (gel on one finger and regular polish on another). A third finger will be left bare to serve as a control. On day 1-3 after nail polish application, the participant will have cotton swab samples taken from underneath their nail and over their nail bed, on each of the two polished nails, as well as the adjacent bare nail. These bacterial samples will be collected both before and after scrubbing (utilizing a nail pick, scrub brush, and chlorhexidine). This process will be repeat on day 5-7 after nail polish application. These samples will then be assessed for bacterial colonies in the Microbiology laboratory. Participant variables will be recorded in RedCap (scrubbing frequency, % of chipping in nails (in quartiles: 0, \< 25%, \< 50%, \<75%, \>75%, Gender, Age, Level of training, Specialty, Type of polish, Dominant hand, Duration since application of polish, Nail length in mm, Race, BMI, Type of bacteria isolated from samples). Summary of Study Visits: Day 0 Participants will have polish applied on two fingers on their dominant hand, one with gel polish and one with regular polish. Day 1-3 The participants will return for their first swabs. Bacterial swabs will be obtained from the nail bed and under the fingernail of 3 fingers: the regular polish nail, the gel polish nail and a bare nail adjacent to the two polished nails, before and after a standard 5-minute scrub with chlorhexidine. Day 5-7 The participants will return for the same procedure described above. The nail polish can be removed after this intervention. No further follow-up or involvement for participants

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERNail polish applicationAfter application of nail polish as described, participants will have bacterial swabs collected from the under the fingernail and from the nail bed of the three assigned fingers on their dominant hand, both before and after scrubbing with a chlorhexidine surgical scrubbing brush.

Timeline

Start date
2021-05-28
Primary completion
2023-05-31
Completion
2023-05-31
First posted
2022-01-27
Last updated
2023-08-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05210920. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.