Impact of Plastic Surgery and an Enhanced Prophylaxis Protocol on Cervical Spine Surgery Infection.

IF 0.7 4区 医学 Q4 SURGERY Plastic surgery Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1177/22925503221120542
Tanvir F Choudhri, Adam Y Li, Muhammad Ali, Zachary Spiera, Naoum Fares Marayati, Alexander J Schupper, John Durbin, Nek Asghar, Nickolas Dreher, Theodore Hannah, Farah Sayegh, Christopher Bellaire, Marco A Harmaty, Philip Torina, Jess Ting, Peter J Taub
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Abstract

Background: Reduction of surgical site infections (SSIs) is important in improving cervical spine surgery outcomes. Plastic surgery involvement and an enhanced modified prophylaxis protocol may reduce infection rates. Methods: A total of 962 cervical spine operations were conducted by a single surgeon (TFC). An enhanced modified prophylaxis protocol and plastic surgery were used in some operations. Differences in infection rates, surgical approach, previous operations, prophylaxis use, and plastic surgery involvement were compared using Fisher's exact tests and multivariate linear regression. Results: Four patients (0.42%) experienced SSIs. All 4 infections involved the standard protocol, posterior approach, and did not involve plastic surgery. The infection rate was lower in the enhanced protocol group when compared to the standard protocol (β -0.78, 95% CI -1.23 to -0.33, P = .0008). The enhanced protocol group had an increased percentage of operations with plastic surgery (β 0.19, 95% CI 0.10 to 0.28, P < .0001). The infection rate among the plastics group was 0.00% compared to 0.60% for the non-plastics group (P = .32). The plastics group had a lower rate of anterior approach when compared to the non-plastics group (β -0.20, 95% CI -0.24 to -0.15, P = .049). Among the posterior approach group, procedures with plastic surgery had an infection rate of 0.00% compared to 2.53% without plastic surgery (P = .13). Conclusion: The enhanced protocol was associated with a lower SSI rate and increased plastic surgery involvement. Posterior approaches were associated with increased infection rates and the likelihood of utilizing plastic surgery. Both the enhanced protocol and plastic surgery may decrease infection.

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整形手术对颈椎手术感染的影响及强化预防方案
背景:减少手术部位感染(SSIs)对改善颈椎手术结果非常重要。参与整形手术和强化改良预防方案可以降低感染率。方法:由一名外科医生(TFC)进行962例颈椎手术。在一些手术中使用了改进的预防方案和整形手术。使用Fisher精确检验和多元线性回归比较感染率、手术方法、既往手术、预防性使用和整形手术参与度的差异。结果:4例(0.42%)患者出现SSI。所有4例感染均涉及标准方案、后路,不涉及整形手术。与标准方案相比,强化方案组的感染率较低(β−0.78,95%CI−1.23至−0.33,P = .0008)。强化方案组整形手术的比例增加(β0.19,95%CI 0.10至0.28,P < .0001)。塑料组的感染率为0.00%,而非塑料组为0.60%(P = .32)。与非塑料组相比,塑料组的前路入路率较低(β−0.20,95%CI−0.24至−0.15,P = .049)。在后入路组中,整形手术组的感染率为0.00%,而未整形手术组为2.53%(P = .13) 。结论:强化方案可降低SSI发生率,增加整形手术的参与度。后部入路与感染率增加和使用整形手术的可能性有关。强化方案和整形手术都可以减少感染。
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来源期刊
Plastic surgery
Plastic surgery Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
73
期刊介绍: Plastic Surgery (Chirurgie Plastique) is the official journal of the Canadian Society of Plastic Surgeons, the Canadian Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, Group for the Advancement of Microsurgery, and the Canadian Society for Surgery of the Hand. It serves as a major venue for Canadian research, society guidelines, and continuing medical education.
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