The influence of surgical mask usage on bacterial contamination of the operative field was studied during 30 cardiac catheterization procedures. Mask position was varied during each procedure according to a predesigned random table. The number of bacterial colonies recoverable when no mask was worn was significantly higher than that detected when a full mask was worn (P < 0.002). Shedding of Staphylococcus epidermidis was greater when no mask was worn (mean 5.2 colonies 10 min-1) than shedding with full mask (mean 2.7 colonies 10 min-1; P < 0.004). Although mask placement below the nose was associated with higher mean colony counts than that above the nose, these differences were not statistically significant.