Surgical Site Infections

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  • Created by: Labake
  • Created on: 13-02-17 13:24
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  • Surgical site infections
    • High infection risk surgeries
      • Micro-organisms present on skin and in gut (intestines)
      • Types of operation procedures
        • Contaminated (15-30%)
          • E.g. intestinal spillage= contaminates surgical site
        • Clean (below 2%)
          • Elective, not entering lumen, superficial e.g. hernia repair
        • Clean contaminated (5-15%)
          • Enters colonised region BUT elective
        • Dirty (over 30%)
          • Emergencies, active infection ALREADY present e.g. abscess or bacterial peritonitis
      • Bile duct, liver, pancreatic,gall bladder, gastric (all gut) = highest SSI risk
    • Guidelines to minimise SSIs
      • Warming
        • Immune system works best when warm
      • Asepsis & preparing incision site
        • To kill microbes in air and on skin
      • Oxygenation
        • For immune system
      • Prophylactic antibiotics
        • For surgery that is not clean or elective
          • Can reduce SSIs by 50%
      • Glucose control
        • For diabetics- hyper-glycaemia= poor immune system
      • Surveillance (follow up surgery)
    • Types of microbes causing SSIs
      • Mostly Staph. a (30%)
        • Has virulence factors e.g. coagulase for sticking to tissue, TSST-1 (toxic shoch syn toxin), B-lactamase
      • Coagulase neg Staph. a, enterococcus, E. coli
      • Can take weeks for microbes to grow and become apparrent
    • Antibiotic prophylaxis and treatment
      • Local antibiotics- think about adverse effects
      • SINGLE IV dose less than 60 mins before surgery
      • Only given earlier if tourniquet used for amputation
      • Hair removal for vision and less infections (using clippers as razors cause micro-abrasions)
      • Chlorhexadine- alcohol paint down most effective
    • Other healthcare associated infections= UTIs, RTIs, Sepsis and  C. difficile diarrhoae
    • SSI occurs in 2.6% of operations and 3rd most common HAI

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