Toward Understanding the Risk of Secondary Airborne Infection: Emission of Respirable Pathogens
Berkeley Public Health Division · University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
Certain respiratory tract infections are transmitted through air. Coughing and sneezing by an infected person can emit pathogen-containing particles with diameters less than 10 microm that can reach the alveolar region. Based on our analysis of the sparse literature on respiratory aerosols, we estimated that emitted particles quickly decrease in diameter due to water loss to one-half the initial values, and that in one cough the volume in particles with initial diameters less than 20 microm is 60 x 10(-8) mL. The pathogen emission rate from a source case depends on the frequency of expiratory events, the respirable particle volume, and the pathogen concentration in respiratory fluid. Viable airborne pathogens…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.65
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 37
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Pathogen
- Ventilation (architecture)
- Settling
- Respiratory tract
- Aerosolization
- Particle (ecology)
- Respiratory system
- Aerosol