The sterilization chain is the unidirectional workflow that takes instruments from contaminated to sterile — known in European practice as the forward flow principle. Each step must be completed in order, without backtracking. Here is the complete chain for dental practices.
The forward flow principle (marche en avant) is the fundamental concept of sterilization: instruments always progress from dirty to clean, then from clean to sterile, without ever going back. This unidirectional flow prevents the recontamination of instruments already processed. In a dental practice, this requires rigorous spatial organisation (separate zones) and temporal organisation (steps in the correct order).
Immediately after use, instruments are immersed in a decontamination bath (enzymatic or detergent-disinfectant solution). This step reduces the initial microbial load and protects staff during subsequent handling. Soaking time varies depending on the product used (typically 15 to 30 minutes). Rotary instruments (turbines, contra-angles) follow manufacturer instructions -- some require lubrication before cleaning.
Cleaning removes organic residue (blood, saliva, debris) that would prevent effective sterilization. Two methods are used in dental practices: the ultrasonic bath (cavitation cleaning, effective for hollow and articulated instruments) and the thermal washer-disinfector (automated, reproducible, recommended by HAS (Haute Autorité de Santé -- National Health Authority) for high-volume practices). Manual brush cleaning remains acceptable but is less reproducible.
After cleaning, instruments are rinsed with clean water (ideally reverse osmosis or demineralized water to avoid limescale deposits) then thoroughly dried. Drying is an often-overlooked but essential step: wet instruments in a pouch compromise the sterility of the packaging. Drying can be done with medical-grade compressed air or a single-use lint-free cloth.
Each instrument is visually inspected (residual contamination, functional condition, corrosion) before packaging. Instruments are placed in sterilization pouches (heat-resistant paper/plastic) appropriate to their size. Pouches are sealed by heat sealing. The sterilization date and cycle number must appear on each pouch -- this marks the beginning of traceability.
Pouches are placed in the autoclave following loading guidelines (do not overload, do not stack pouches). In dental practice, the Class B autoclave is the benchmark -- the only class capable of sterilizing hollow and wrapped instruments. The standard cycle is 134°C for 18 minutes (prion cycle). Before the first load of the day, a Bowie-Dick or Helix test validates proper autoclave function.
At the end of the cycle, the autoclave prints a report containing the recorded parameters (temperature, pressure, duration). This report is the cornerstone of traceability -- it proves that sterilization conditions were achieved.
Dental turbines, contra-angle handpieces, and ultrasonic scaler tips are hollow instruments — steam must penetrate internal channels to ensure sterilization. This is why a Class B autoclave (with pre-vacuum cycle) is mandatory: Class N autoclaves do not reliably sterilize hollow instruments.
The prion cycle (134°C for 18 minutes, mandated by Circular DGS/5C/DHOS/E2 n°2001-138 of 14 March 2001) applies to all instruments in contact with at-risk tissues. Turbines require particular attention: lubrication per manufacturer's instructions before cleaning, use of the Helix test (not Bowie-Dick) to validate steam penetration into channels, and individual packaging in appropriately sized pouches. A failed Helix test means hollow instruments in the load are not sterilized — even if the autoclave report shows "cycle passed." For details on autoclave testing, see the biological controls guide.
Sterilized pouches are stored in a clean, dry space, away from dust and direct light. The use-by date (DLU) depends on the packaging type and storage conditions -- in practice, from 1 to 6 months depending on the packaging. A pouch whose integrity is compromised (torn, opened, wet) must be repackaged and resterilized.
For details on calculating the use-by date, see our dedicated guide.
Traceability is the step most practices neglect -- and the one inspectors check first. Each autoclave cycle must be documented: date, time, programme, result, operator, loaded instruments. The link between the patient, the instruments used, and the sterilization cycle must be established and verifiable.
This is precisely what SecuSteri does: the autoclave report is imported automatically, the operator selects the instruments in the load, signs with their PIN code, and the traceability record is generated. QR labels link each pouch to its cycle.
Skipping pre-disinfection (dried residue is much harder to remove during cleaning). Packaging instruments that are still wet. Overloading the autoclave (prevents steam from reaching all surfaces). Breaking the forward flow (placing clean instruments on a contaminated surface). Not documenting cycles (a missing or incomplete register is the leading cause of sanctions during ARS inspections).
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