Preoperative Surgical Site Hair Removal for Elective Abdominal Surgery: Does It Have Impact on Surgical Site Infection

被引:3
|
作者
Dhamnaskar, Suchin [1 ]
Mandal, Sumit [1 ]
Koranne, Mandar [1 ]
Patil, Pratik [1 ]
机构
[1] King Edward Mem Hosp, Seth GS Med Coll, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
来源
SURGERY JOURNAL | 2022年 / 08卷 / 03期
关键词
preoperative hair shaving; surgical site infection; elective abdominal surgery; POSTOPERATIVE WOUND INFECTIONS; RISK-FACTORS; SURVEILLANCE; EPIDEMIOLOGY; SHAVE;
D O I
10.1055/s-0042-1749425
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Introduction Postoperative surgical site infection (SSI) forms the major burden of nosocomial infections in surgical patients. There is prevalent practice of surgical site hair shaving as a part of preoperative preparation. There is uncertainty regarding the benefit versus harm of shaving for SSIs. Hairs at surgical sites are removed prior to surgery most often by shaving. We performed this study to look for what impact preoperative hair removal by shaving has on postoperative SSI. Methods We performed prospective comparative cohort study in patients undergoing elective abdominal surgeries. We included clean and clean-contaminated surgeries in immunocompetent patients of which half were shaved and other half not shaved prior to surgery. Other confounding factors like skin cleaning, aseptic technique of surgery, antibiotic prophylaxis and treatment, and postoperative wound care were as per care. Patients were assessed for presence and grade of SSI postoperatively on day 7, 14, and 30. Results were analyzed statistically using chi-square and Fischer's exact tests for significance in entire sample as well as in demographic subgroups. Results Overall SSI rate was 11.42%. There was no statistically significant difference in SSI rates between patients who underwent preoperative surgical site hair removal by shaving (232) and who did not have shaving (232) on all the three different assessment timelines in postoperative period, namely, day 7, 14, and 30. Although the absolute number of patients who had SSI was more in those who underwent preoperative surgical site hair removal by shaving, the difference was not statistically significant (p > 0.05). But on subgroup analysis patients with clean-contaminated surgeries (p = 0.037) and patients with surgeries lasting for less than 2 hours (Fischer's exact = 0.034) had significantly higher SSI in the shaved group compared with unshaved on day 14. Conclusion As per our results, preoperative shaving did not significantly increase overall SSI except in subgroup of clean-contaminated surgeries and in surgeries of less than 2 hours' duration. So especially in these patients avoiding preoperative surgical site hair shaving may be used as one of the infection control measures.
引用
收藏
页码:E179 / E186
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Evaluation of the Bundle "Zero Surgical Site Infection'' to Prevent Surgical Site Infection in Vascular Surgery
    Fernandez-Prada, Maria
    Martinez-Ortega, Carmen
    Revuelta-Marino, Livia
    Menendez-Herrero, Angeles
    Navarro-Gracia, Juan F.
    ANNALS OF VASCULAR SURGERY, 2017, 41 : 160 - 168
  • [42] Procalcitonin as a predictive marker for surgical site infection in elective colorectal cancer surgery
    Takakura, Yuji
    Hinoi, Takao
    Egi, Hiroyuki
    Shimomura, Manabu
    Adachi, Tomohiro
    Saito, Yasufumi
    Tanimine, Naoki
    Miguchi, Masashi
    Ohdan, Hideki
    LANGENBECKS ARCHIVES OF SURGERY, 2013, 398 (06) : 833 - 839
  • [43] Vancomycin powder for the prevention of surgical site infection in posterior elective spinal surgery
    David Delgado-Lopez, Pedro
    Martin-Alonso, Javier
    Martin-Velasco, Vicente
    Manuel Castilla-Diez, Jose
    Galacho-Harrieroa, Ana
    Ortega-Cuberoa, Sara
    Isabel Herrero-Gutierrez, Ana
    Rodriguez-Salazar, Antonio
    NEUROCIRUGIA, 2020, 31 (02): : 64 - 75
  • [44] Incisional surgical site infection after elective laparoscopic surgery for colorectal carcinoma
    Kojima, Yutaka
    Tashiro, Yoshihiko
    Nagayasu, Kiichi
    Niwa, Koichiro
    Ono, Seigo
    Ishiyama, Shun
    Sugimoto, Kiichi
    Hata, Masaki
    Kamiyama, Hirohiko
    Takahashi, Makoto
    Yaginuma, Yukihiro
    Goto, Michitoshi
    Tanaka, Masanobu
    Sengoku, Hironobu
    Okuzawa, Atsushi
    Tomiki, Yuichi
    Sakamoto, Kazuhiro
    JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY, 2010, 25 : A173 - A174
  • [45] Procalcitonin as a predictive marker for surgical site infection in elective colorectal cancer surgery
    Yuji Takakura
    Takao Hinoi
    Hiroyuki Egi
    Manabu Shimomura
    Tomohiro Adachi
    Yasufumi Saito
    Naoki Tanimine
    Masashi Miguchi
    Hideki Ohdan
    Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery, 2013, 398 : 833 - 839
  • [46] Impact of Teaching on Surgical Site Infection after Colonic Surgery
    Grass, Fabian
    Pache, Basile
    Petignat, Christiane
    Moulin, Estelle
    Hahnloser, Dieter
    Demartines, Nicolas
    Hubner, Martin
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL EDUCATION, 2018, 75 (05) : 1287 - 1291
  • [47] Incisional Surgical Site Infection after Elective Open Surgery for Colorectal Cancer
    Ishikawa, Kosuke
    Kusumi, Takaya
    Hosokawa, Masao
    Nishida, Yasunori
    Sumikawa, Sosuke
    Furukawa, Hiroshi
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, 2014, 2014
  • [48] A CLINICAL STUDY OF ABDOMINAL SURGICAL SITE INFECTION
    Chandrakar, Sandeep
    Agrawal, Amit
    Gupta, Anirudh
    JOURNAL OF EVOLUTION OF MEDICAL AND DENTAL SCIENCES-JEMDS, 2019, 8 (02): : 155 - 159
  • [49] Impact of Surgical Training on Incidence of Surgical Site Infection
    Rosenthal, Rachel
    Weber, Walter P.
    Zwahlen, Marcel
    Misteli, Heidi
    Reck, Stefan
    Oertli, Daniel
    Widmer, Andreas F.
    Marti, Walter R.
    WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2009, 33 (06) : 1165 - 1173
  • [50] The impact of surgical time of day and surgical site infection
    Cumin, David
    Cheeseman, James F.
    Warman, Guy R.
    NEW ZEALAND MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2024, 137 (1606) : 107 - 109