scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Infection and sepsis after operations for total hip or knee-joint replacement: influence of ultraclean air, prophylactic antibiotics and other factors

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Operating in ultraclean air and the prophylactic use of antibiotics have been found to reduce the incidence of joint sepsis confirmed at re-operation, after total hip or knee-joint replacement.
Abstract
Operating in ultraclean air and the prophylactic use of antibiotics have been found to reduce the incidence of joint sepsis confirmed at re-operation, after total hip or knee-joint replacement. The reduction was about 2-fold when operations were done in ultraclean air, 4.5-fold when body-exhaust suits also were worn, and about 3- to 4-fold when antibiotics had been given prophylactically. The effects of ultraclean air and antibiotics were additive. Wound sepsis recognized during post-operative hospital stay was, however, reduced by these measures only when it had been classed as major wound sepsis. This was reported after 2.3% of operations done without antibiotic cover in conventionally ventilated operating rooms. Joint sepsis was much more frequent after wound infection and especially after major wound sepsis, although most cases of joint sepsis were not preceded by recognized wound sepsis. This was particularly noticeable after major wound sepsis associated with Staphylococcus aureus; after 37 such infections the same species was subsequently found in the septic joint of 11 patients. The sources of wound colonization with Staph. aureus, when this was not followed by joint sepsis, appeared to differ widely from those where joint sepsis occurred later. Operating-room sources could be found for most of the latter and the risk of infection appeared to be similar with respect to any carrier in the operating room whether a member of the operating team or the patient. For wound colonization that was not followed by joint sepsis, operating-room sources could only be inferred for fewer than half and of these more than one half appeared to be related to strains carried by the patient at the time of operation. During the follow-up period, which averaged about 2 1/4 years with a maximum of four years, there were, in addition to the 86 instances of deep joint sepsis confirmed at re-operation, 85 instances in which sepsis in the joint was suspected during this period but was not confirmed, because re-operation on the joint was not done. The incidence of suspected joint sepsis was, like that of confirmed joint sepsis, less after operations done in ultraclean air: 1/2.5, or with prophylactic antibiotics, 1/2.3 Although re-operation was more frequent on the knee-joint than on the hip, and pain after the initial operation was more frequent after knee operations, there was no evidence that this was the result of any increased risk of infection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The incidence of deep prosthetic infections in a specialist orthopaedic hospital: A 15-YEAR PROSPECTIVE SURVEY

TL;DR: The results set a benchmark and importantly emphasise that only 64% of peri-prosthetic infections arise within one year of surgery, and illustrate the advantages of conducting joint replacement surgery in the isolation of a specialist hospital.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gentamicin coating of metallic implants reduces implant-related osteomyelitis in rats.

TL;DR: Local application of antibiotic-coated orthopedic devices containing PDLLA and 10% gentamicin significantly reduced implant-related infection in this animal model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence and risk factors of prosthetic joint infection after total hip or knee replacement in patients with rheumatoid arthritis.

TL;DR: Patients with RA who undergo total hip or knee replacement are at increased risk of prosthetic joint infection, which is further increased in the setting of revision arthroplasty and a previous prosthetics joint infection.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of ultraclean air in operating rooms on deep sepsis in the joint after total hip or knee replacement: a randomised study.

TL;DR: In this article, a multicentre study of sepsis after total hip or knee replacement the operations performed by each surgeon were allocated at random between control and ultraclean-air operating rooms.

Effect of ultraclean air in operating rooms on deep sepsis in the joint after total hip or knee replacement: a randomised study OMLIDWELL, E J L LOWBURY, W WHYTE, R BLOWERS, S J STANLEY, D LOWE

Middlesex Hai, +1 more
TL;DR: In the patients whose prostheses were inserted in an operating room ventilated by an ultraclean-air system the incidence of joint sepsis confirmed at reoperation within the next one to four years was about half that of patients who had had the operation in a conventionally ventilated room at the same hospital.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deep wound sepsis following total hip arthroplasty.

TL;DR: After follow-ups ranging from two to five years on all but four of 2,694 patients who had 3,215 total hip arthroplasties, deep wound infection had been demonstrated in forty-two patients, and only eight of the forty-one patients (forty-two hips) was salvage of the prostheticArthroplasty possible.
Journal ArticleDOI

PROPHYLACTIC CEFAZOLIN VERSUS PLACEBO IN TOTAL HIP REPLACEMENT Report of a Multicentre Double-blind Randomised Trial

TL;DR: Hip infections were less common in the four centres with hypersterile operating theatres, and the benefits of prophylactic antibiotics were restricted to patients having hip replacement operations in conventional theatres.
Related Papers (5)