• Title/Summary/Keyword: Post-operative infected wound

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Factors Related to Surgical Site Infections in Patients Undergoing General Surgery (일반외과 환자의 수술부위 감염 관련 요인 분석)

  • Ahn You-Jin;Sohng Kyeong-Yae
    • Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamentals of Nursing
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.113-120
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    • 2005
  • Purpose: To identify risk factors for surgical site infections in patients undergoing general surgery, to analyze the prolonged hospital stay and extra cost for antibiotics, and to provide basic data for control of surgical site infections. Method: Surgical site infection was defined using the definition of the CDC and the data were analyzed by $x^2$-test and unpaired t-test. Results: The prevalence of surgical site infections was 9.7%, and it was related to wound class, duration of operation, number of operations, whether the operation was an emergency, trauma, drains, preoperative stays, presence of remote infection during operative period, and previous history of recent surgery. The mean duration for post-operative stay when a surgical site infection occurred was 9.5 days and in 56.9 % of the patients the surgical site infection appeared 7 days after the operation. Post-operative stays for infected patients were 20.3 days longer than that of uninfected patients. The mean cost of antibiotics for infected patients was higher than that for uninfected patients by 561,067 won per person. Conclusion: Surgical site infection results in an increased length of stay and extra-cost, thus, hospitals need to create strategies to reduce nosocomial infections through effective infection surveillance and by considering factors related to surgical site infections.

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The care of infected orocutaneous open wounds after open reduction in compound comminuted fracture of mandible.;Report of cases (하악골 복합 분쇄골절의 관혈적 정복술후 감염된 구강내외 관통창상의 처치에 관한 증례보고.)

  • Yoo, Jae-Ha;Lee, Jae-Whee
    • Maxillofacial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.267-275
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    • 1989
  • This is a report of cases that post-operative orocutaneous through & through open wounds are healed & closed by wound contraction if soft tissue drainage was well established, which seldom is interfered with by local or systemic abnormalities. Authors also found that the localization & seguestration of infected mandible are far better performed by natural mechanisms than by cutting across involved bone.

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A CASE REPORT OF UNCONTROLLED INFECTION IN POSTOPERATIVE PATIENT (술후 감염조절이 어려웠던 환자의 증례보고)

  • Kim, Soo-Min;Yeo, Hwan-Ho;Kim, Young-Kyun;Kim, Su-Gwan;Seo, Jae-Hoon;Park, In-Soon;Park, In-Soo;Kim, Young-Uk
    • Maxillofacial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
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    • v.19 no.1
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    • pp.87-92
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    • 1997
  • Treatment of infected mandibular fracture is confronted with various difficult problem, e.g. nosocomial wound infection, non-union of fracture, osteomyelitis. Recently, nosocomial infection has become a major health problem because of excessive morbidity, personal distress, and cost. Frequently, isolated causative microorganisms of nosocomial infection were staphylococcus aureus, pseudomonas aeruginosa, klebsiella species. The various manifestation of the disease related to the pathogenesis and the clinical course tend to give a bad prognosis after operation. This is a report of case that post-operative infected mandibular fracture in 53-year-old man was not healed even through aggressive I & D and antibiotic treatment.

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THE LONG-TERM CONSERVATIVE DRAINAGE CARE OF EXTENSIVE OSTEOMYELITIS ASSOCIATED WITH MANDIBULAR COMPOUND FRACTURE : REPORT OF A CASE (장기간의 보존적 배농술로 치료된 하악 복합골절 관련 광범위 골수염 치험 : 증례보고)

  • Kim, Ha-Rang;Yoo, Jae-Ha;Choi, Byung-Ho;Sul, Sung-Han;Mo, Dong-Yub;Lee, Chun-Ui
    • Maxillofacial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
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    • v.31 no.6
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    • pp.544-549
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    • 2009
  • Failure to use effective methods of reduction, fixation and immobilization may lead to osteomyelitis with the exposed necrotic bone, as the overzealous use of transosseous wires & plates that devascularizes bone segments in the compound comminuted fractures of mandible. Once osteomyelitis secondary to fractures has become established, intermaxillary fixation should be instituted as early as possible. Fixation enhances patient comfort and hinders ingress of microorganisms and debris by movement of bone fragments. Teeth and foreign materials that are in the line of fracture should be removed and initial debridement performed at the earliest possible time. Grossly necrotic bone should be excised as early as possible ; no attempt should be made to create soft tissue flaps to achieve closure over exposed bone. The key to treatment of chronic osteomyelitis of the mandible is adequate and prolonged soft tissue drainage. If good soft tissue drainage is provided over a long period, sequestration of infected bone followed by regeneration or fibrous tissue replacement will occur so that appearance and function are not seriously altered. Localization and sequestration of infected mandible are far better performed by natural mechanism of homeostasis than by cutting across involved bone with a cosmetic or functional defect. As natural host defenses and conservative therapy begin to be effective, the process may become chronic, inflammation regresses, granulation tissue is formed, and new blood vessels cause lysis of bone, thus separating fragments of necrotic bone(sequestra) from viable bone. The sequestra may be isolated by a bed of granulation tissue, encased in a sheath of new bone(involucrum), and removed easily with pincettes. This is a case report of the long-term conservative drainage care in osteomyelitis associated with mandibular fractures.