Particle Shedding in Clean Rooms: Laundered vs. Single Use – The Surprising Verdict

 

Particle Shedding in Clean Rooms: In an increasingly cleanliness-obsessed world, it’s becoming evident that choices regarding the materials we use have far-reaching impacts. This is particularly true in highly controlled environments like clean rooms, where the importance of minimizing particle shedding is paramount. The question arises as to whether reusable or single-use garments should be employed. Comfortability might initially draw us toward the former, but as David Kreitzere, a controlled environments specialist at Dupont, points out, the allure of comfort might be misleading.

Laundered garments, while comfortable, suffer from large pore sizes. This results in significant particle shedding into the clean room, posing a risk to the sterile environment. In contrast, single-use garments such as Tyvek offer nearly complete particle barriers, maintaining a cleaner environment.

Looking past the initial upfront cost comparison, Kreitzer points out the long-term price equivalence. Interestingly, while laundered garments might seem more economical initially, over time the risk of particle shedding in clean rooms increases with each wash cycle. Furthermore, the logistics of laundry services often involve additional costs like surcharges, lost garment fees, and inflexible contracts.

Conversely, with single-use suits like Tyvek, the costs are known upfront. There are no contractual commitments, no surcharges, and, most importantly, no room for the increased risk of contamination through particle shedding.

With this perspective, the choice seems clearer, balancing the pros and cons between initial cost, cleanliness, and long-term efficiency. Let’s hear more from David Kreitzer, who will guide us further on this topic of controlled environments on the show today.

Recent Episodes

Medicine isn’t what it used to be—not for the people practicing it. Independent physicians are becoming the exception, not the norm, as more doctors move into hospital systems, corporate groups, and academic networks. At the same time, the pipeline of specialists isn’t keeping pace with growing patient needs, particularly in complex fields like vascular…

Healthcare isn’t short on strategy right now—it’s short on people, access, and experienced leadership where it matters most. In Texas alone, more rural hospitals have closed than in any other state over the past decade, leaving entire communities with limited access to care. At the same time, many health systems are realizing they haven’t…

As healthcare costs continue to rise, more patients are finding themselves navigating not just illness, but the growing complexity of paying for treatment. Specialty pharmacy sits right at the center of that challenge—often out of sight, but increasingly essential to how modern care actually works. These high-cost, high-touch therapies now make up more than…