Title: Surgical Infections
1Surgical Infections
- MS-3 Surgery Clerkship Lecture
- David C. Yu M.D.
- 10/25/10
2Ignaz Semmelweis
- 1847
- Realized that washing hand with a chlorinated
lime solution decreased incidence of newborn
death from puerperal fever.
3Joseph Lister
- 1883-1897
- British surgeon
- Used Carbolic Acid (Phenol) to clean hands,
instruments and wipe on surgical wounds
drastically decreased infections.
4Overview
- Recognizing Infection
- Soft Tissue Infections
- Post-operative Infections
- Surgical Site Infection
- Hospital Acquired Infections
- Antibiotic Prophylaxis
- Blood Born Pathogens
5Infection
- Infection is defined by
-
- Microorganisms in host tissue or the bloodstream
- Inflammatory response to their presence.
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7Inflammatory Response
- Localized
- Rubor, Calor, Dolor, Tumor, and functio laesa
(loss of function) - Systemic
- Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS)
8S.I.R.S.
- Any Two of the Following Criteria
- Temperature lt 36.0, gt38.0
- Heart Rate gt90
- Respiratory Rate gt20
- WBC lt4,000, gt12,000
9Sepsis
- Definition SIRS plus evidence of local or
systemic infection.
Septic Shock
Definition Sepsis plus end organ hypoprofusion.
Mortality of up to 40
10Soft Tissue Infections
- Cellulitis
- Abscess
- Necrotizing Infections
11Cellulitis
12Cellulitis
- Definition Diffuse infection with severe
inflammation of dermal and subcutaneous layers of
the skin - Diagnosis Pain, Warmth, Hyperesthesia
- Treatment Antibiotics.
- Common Pathogens Skin Flora (Streptococcus/Staphy
lococcus)
13Abscess
14Abscess
- Definition Infectious accumulation of purulent
material (Neutrophils) in a closed cavity - Diagnosis Fluctuant Moveable and compressible
- Treatment Drainage
15Necrotizing Soft Tissue Infection
16Necrotizing Soft Tissue Infection
- Definition Deep infection of skin and soft
tissue that may spread rapidly along facial
planes. - Diagnosis Purely Clinical, dishwater discharge,
gray tissue, pain out of proportion to
examination, bulla, and dark, golden
discoloration. - Treatment True Surgical Emergency, Antibiotics
17Necrotizing Soft Tissue Infection
- Common Pathogens
- Clostridium
- Group A streptococcus
- Polymicrobial
- Toxic Shock Syndrome
- Streptococcus
- Staphylococcus
18Post-Operative Infections
- Fever After Surgery
- The Five Ws
- Wind Atelectisis
- Water UTI
- Walking DVT
- Wonder Drug Medication Induced
- Wound Surgical Site Infection
19Surgical Site Infections
- 3rd most common hospital infection
- Incisional
- Superficial
- Deep
- Organ Space
- Generalized (peritonitis)
- Abscess
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21Types of Surgery
Clean Hernia repair breast biopsy 1.5
Clean-Contaminated Cholecystectomy planned bowel resection 2-5
Contaminated Non-preped bowel resection 5-30
Dirty/infected perforation, abscess 5-30
22Host Risk Factors
- Diabetes mellitus
- Hypoxemia
- Hypothermia
- Leukopenia
- Nicotine (tobacco smoking)
- Immunosuppression
- Malnutrition
- Poor skin hygiene
23Perioperative Risk Factors
- Operative site shaving
- Breaks in operative sterile technique
- Improper antimicrobial prophylaxis
- Prolonged hypotension
- Contaminated operating room
- Poor wound care postoperatively
- Hyperglycemia
- Wound closure technique
24Treatment
- Incisional open surgical wound, antibiotics for
cellulitis or sepsis - Deep/Organ space Source control, antibiotics for
sepsis
25Operative Antibiotic Prophylaxis
- Decreases bacterial counts at surgical site
- Given within 30 minutes prior to starting surgery
- Vancomycin 1-2 hours prior to surgery
- Redose for longer surgery
- Do not continue beyond 24 hours
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27Other Hospital Acquired Infections
- Urinary Tract Infection
- Indwelling Catheter Infection
- Pneumonia
28Use/Choice of Antibiotics
- Use only when indicated
- Start with broad spectrum antibiotics designed to
cover likely pathogens - Take cultures when possible
- Deescalate spectrum once pathogen is know
- Have a plan for duration
29Occupational Blood Bourne Virus Infections
HBV HCV HIV
Risk from Needle stick 30 2 0.3
Chemoprophylaxis Yes No Yes
Vaccine Yes No No