Preoperative
Identification of patient risk factors
Optimizing immune and nutritional status
Optimizing medical comorbidities such as diabetes, immunosuppression, and dental disease
Preoperative screening and decolonization for Staphylococcus aureus carriers
Appropriate selection of intravenous antibiotic prophylaxis based on hospital pathogens
Weight-based dosing of antibiotics
Appropriate hair removal
Evaluation for skin lesions or areas of local infection
Intraoperative
Selecting appropriate agent for skin antisepsis
Wide prep and drape
Laminar flow and HEPA filters for operating room
Limiting traffic in operating room
Adequate hemostasis
Limiting tissue trauma and avoiding electrocautery at tissue surface
Vigorous wound irrigation
Careful tissue approximation and attention to wound closure
Limiting surgical time
Postoperative
Occlusive dressing for at least 48 h
Attention to tape allergies and skin irritants
Continuing to optimize comorbidities
Education regarding fever and warning signs of early infection
Close wound surveillance
Consulting with an infectious disease specialist if any signs or warning signals of infection are present
5.2 Preoperative Practices
Before an implantable pain therapy procedure, it is important to identify and (if possible) modify known patient risk factors for the development of SSIs, including altered immunity (e.g., HIV/AIDS or corticosteroid use), malabsorption syndrome, poor dental hygiene, diabetes, obesity, remote infection, and tobacco use. If hair removal is required, it should be performed immediately before surgery, using electrical clippers.
Because a majority of SSIs are caused by Staphylococcus aureus (the leading nosocomial pathogen globally), it is important to preoperatively identify carriers of both methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (MSSA) and methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). More than 80 % of healthcare-associated S. aureus infections have an endogenous origin. In one review examining infection for implantable pain therapies, S. aureus was the most commonly identified organism. Preoperative decolonization protocols for known carriers of S. aureus (both MSSA and MSRA), which include mupirocin nasal ointment and chlorhexidine soap, have been shown to reduce the risk of postoperative S. aureus infections in other populations receiving implantable devices (i.e., total joint arthroplasty).
Prophylactic antibiotic therapy with weight-based dosing (Table 5.2) has been shown to reduce the incidence of wound infection by 50 %, independent of surgery type. Weight-based dosing is important in order to achieve tissue and serum minimum inhibitory concentrations. Furthermore, failure to optimize antimicrobial therapy has been shown to increase the risk of infection by twofold to sixfold. Intravenous antibiotics should be administered within 1 h prior to surgical incision, or within 2 h when vancomycin is used. Additional studies have indicated a further reduction in SSIs when antibiotics (excluding vancomycin) are given within 30 min before incision. A study examining risk factors for infection following spinal surgery demonstrated a 3.4-fold increased risk of SSI if antibiotics were given after surgical incision.
≤80 kg | 81–160 kg | ≥160 kg | |
---|---|---|---|
Cefazolin | 1 g | 2 g | 3 g
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