| What is MaestroMD and why is it
being used for musical wind instruments? |
|
MaestroMD is a revolutionary new service from Encore
Etc., Inc. that sterilizes musical wind instruments such
as flutes, clarinets, saxophones and trumpets. Each
year, the health of millions of musicians and
schoolchildren is put at risk if they play unsterilized
wind instruments.
Laboratory studies have suggested that pathogenic
bacteria can survive and thrive in a wind instrument -
not only in the mouthpiece, but also inside the
instrument. Until now, music dealers and schools have
used a variety of methods to clean, sanitize and
disinfect mouthpieces and instruments, but these methods
have only reduced the bacteria on instruments, not
eliminate it. The MaestroMD Sterilization System
destroys all the bacteria on, in, and around the musical
wind instrument and its case. |
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| How long has bacteria
in wind instruments been a problem? How come we've never
heard of this before? |
|
For years, the importance of not sharing personal
items that we put in our mouths – from soda cans to
toothbrushes has been drilled into our consciousness.
Physicians, dentists and government organizations like
the Center for Disease Control (CDC) have cited the
risks inherent in sharing these items.
However, every day, musicians; including millions of
school-aged children; take a similar risk each time they
pick up their wind instrument. Parents of school-aged
musicians have long believed that the schools or music
dealers from whom they rent, loan, or buy instruments
have been taking steps to ensure these instruments have
been sterilized. But, in fact, this sterilization
technology has not been available up until now.
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| How did the idea for
MasestroMD come about? |
|
In the mid 1990s, Dr. Lorenzo Lepore, a practicing
dentist in Massachusetts, was approached by a school
music teacher who had loaned a school-owned wind
instrument to a sick student musician. She sought his
advice before loaning it out to another student. Dr.
Lepore instructed her to have the instrument sterilized
but then learned that there was no accepted method for
sterilizing instruments that likely harbored bacteria.
Dr. Lepore set out to find a solution, and committed
more than eight years to researching and identifying an
EPA-approved sterilization process that could be used
for wind instruments. |
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| What do I tell PARENTS
if they ask me about MaestroMD, and the need for
sterilization? |
|
If you are asked about wind instrument sterilization
because of an article a parent might have seen in the
news, here's what we suggest:
- For more information we invite them to visit our
website www.MaestroMD.com,
where they can visit a special PARENTS section where
there is lots of information specific to their
interests and needs.
- If they have purchased a new or used instrument on
an on-line auction site, or through an ad or at a yard
sale, we strongly recommend they sterilize the
instrument and replace the case.
- Keep them informed about what you're doing as a
school:
- Download and personalize a letter from our
Educator Support Center and send it home to
parents
- Refer them to your local school music dealer to
get their child's instrument sterilized
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| Our students have
played with unsterilized instruments for years and have
been okay, why do we need this service now? |
|
Until Dr. Lepore began his research into the topic of
wind instrument sterilization nobody had considered such
risks. If you played an instrument as a child, you could
very well have gotten strep or had one continuous health
issue after another which could simply not have been
explained. And pediatricians and doctors have not been
programmed to ask, "Do you play a wind instrument?", so
the correlation has never been made.
The fact is, it takes epidemiologists and a
considerable amount of health sleuthing to connect the
dots. Consider the “discoveries” surrounding the
danger of asbestos and lead paint. Our parents had no
intention of putting us in harm's way when our basements
were filled with asbestos. Nor did we consider that our
children would be eating the paint from window sills and
contracting lead paint poisoning. Discovering these
dangers took years.
And consider another discovery in the early 1990's
the dental profession came under intense scrutiny when a
dentist in Florida inadvertently infected several
patients, which ultimately lead to their deaths.
These deaths in Florida led to significant changes in
the way dentistry is practiced in the United States.
Today, every credible medical or dental practitioner
would demand that any instrument being put into the
mouth of a patient be sterilized prior to use on a
subsequent patient.
In 2004, Dr. Lepore had his efforts to have wind
instruments considered with the same seriousness as
medical devices publicly validated. That year the FDA
declared its support of Encore's efforts in developing
MaestroMD. The Agency issued a letter stating: “We
agree that Encore Etc., Inc. is addressing a valid
public health issue consistent with the universal
precautions adhered to in medical/dental settings
relative to instruments contaminated with body
fluids.”
Basically this means that wind instruments should be
treated the same way that medical devices are. |
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| What types of bacteria
are found on these wind instruments? What types of
infections can result from those bacteria? |
|
Formal medical studies on the millions of musical
wind instruments in the general population have not been
performed due to the exorbitant costs and logistics that
would be involved in testing these instruments. In lieu
of such broad population testing, Encore Etc., Inc.
conducted laboratory-based scientific studies which
proved that bacteria causing staph and strep infections,
sore throats, and much more serious diseases such as
meningitis and tuberculosis can survive and even grow
inside a musical wind instrument. |
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| How long can these bacteria survive in the
instrument? Can they grow? |
|
Encore Etc., Inc, the developer of MaestroMD,
commissioned laboratory research in which five specific
bacteria were introduced to a set of musical wind
instruments. These instruments were then stored and
testesd at 7, 14, and 21 elapsed days to determine
which, if any, of the bacteria remained alive.
A total of 95 tests were completed over the 21 days
and one out of three tests was positive for living
bacteria. It is also very important to note that the
specific set of tests performed on the 21st day reported
positive for living bacteria in one of four tests –
even after 21 days had passed.
Encore Etc., Inc. believes this scientific data
strongly suggests that bacteria could live long past 21
days in a musical wind instrument. This belief was
reinforced when five of the instruments from the 21-day
test were used for additional testing five months later.
One of the bacteria used in the original test
(tuberculosis surrogate) was found still living in two
of the five instruments…five months after they were
originally “infected.”
In other laboratory research conducted by Encore
Etc., Inc., four wind instrument mouthpieces were
“infected” with four different bacteria, and were
then stored in a sealed humid atmosphere for seven days.
The test was intended to simulate an instrument being
put away without being dried and stored in its case for
a week after being played, a habit that is fairly common
among many student musicians.
After seven days, testing revealed that all four of
the bacteria were still alive, and three of the four
bacteria populations actually grew in size. Population
growth in these three bacteria ranged from a 62%
increase up to a 93% increase. |
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| We tell our students to regularly clean
their mouthpieces, isn't this enough? |
|
"Cleaned", "disinfected", "deodorized", or
"sanitized" do not mean the same thing as "sterilized".
The only way to be sure that the mouthpiece is 100% free
from all harmful bacteria is through sterilization.
Music dealers and schools have used various methods
of cleaning and disinfecting instruments before passing
them from one student to another - some more effective
than others. Until recently, it has not occurred to
anyone that bacteria could live inside the instrument
where conventional cleaning methods are either
impractical or inadequate.
It is common to "suck back" when playing a woodwind
and many brass players commonly angle their instruments
up into the air when playing, allowing some fluid to
drain backward. Both of these practices could create a
path for the harmful bacteria to make its way back into
the mouth from the body of the instrument.
Regular cleaning and disinfecting of mouthpieces and
wind instruments are critical, but to be guaranteed of
being 100% bacteria free, sterilization is the only
solution. |
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| How much does sterilization cost?
|
|
Encore Etc., Inc. charges for sterilization on a per
instrument basis, please call for pricing. Prices vary
by size and quantity. Bands and orchestras that want to
sterilize all of their instruments at one time can
appreciate considerable savings on bulk orders. |
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| Will the process damage my instrument or
impact its sound quality? |
|
Absolutely not. The instruments never leave their
cases, nor are they subjected to extreme heat or
moisture.
The gas actually flows through the through the
special fabric contained in the MaestroMD pouch, and the
air gaps in the seams of your case, completely filling
both the case and the inside of your instrument.
Encore Etc., Inc. precisely controls the amount of
time the gas is left in your case and instrument, which
allows it to do its job. Then a series of steps reverse
the process to make sure that the sterilization gas is
completely removed from inside the case and your
instrument. |
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| How does this sterilization process
work? |
|
The MaestroMD Sterilization System uses a gas
sterilization process used for decades to sterilize
medical instruments. Your instruments are loaded into a
MaestroMD sterilization container and placed into a
large sterilization enclosure, which is where the real
work begins. The environment in the sterilization
enclosure is monitored and controlled by sophisticated
scientific equipment with respect to atmospheric
pressure, temperature, humidity, and gas concentration
levels. Your instruments are monitored every minute of
every hour that they spend in the sterilization
enclosure, just as if they were medical
devices. |
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| Where are these instruments being
sterilized? |
|
Encore Etc., Inc. has several sterilization locations
around the country. Your instruments are shipped to the
appropriate sterilization location based on the size of
your order and the capacity of the specific
sterilization facility. |
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| Will all bacteria present on the instrument
be eradicated? |
| Yes, MaestroMD eliminates
all traces of bacteria on and inside the instruments and
inside their cases. |
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| How can instruments be sterile if they
never leave the case? |
| This is the beauty of
MaestroMD! The combination of the molecular properties
of the sterilization gas and the highly controlled
environment in the sterilization enclosure allows the
sterilization gas to flow through spaces so small that
they are invisible to the eye.
The gas actually flows through the MaestroMD
sterilization container, through the special fabric of
the MaestroMD pouch, and completely fills the air spaces
inside your case and instrument.
Encore Etc., Inc. precisely controls the amount of
time the gas is left in your case and instrument, which
allows it to do its job. Then a series of steps reverse
the process to make sure that the sterilization gas is
completely removed from inside the case and your
instrument. |
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| How can I be sure the process worked? Is it
something I can see? |
|
Your instruments are returned in medically treated
sterilization pouches that will have two "Sterilized by
MaestroMD" decals. These labels are your guarantee that
the instruments are bacteria-free.
It is important that the instrument stays in
the pouch until you give it to the student musician.
Once the bag is opened, the instrument is, by
definition, no longer "sterilized". |
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| Is this sterilization safe? |
| Yes, the MaestroMD process
is safe for both your musicians and your instruments.
The EPA has approved the gas used in the MaestroMD
process for sterilizing musical wind instruments. The
MaestroMD process uses the same sterilization protocols
that have been used for decades to sterilize surgical
instruments, disposable medical and dental devices,
spices, and even bandages and hospital gowns worn by
surgeons. |
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