Hair removal with a clipper and microbial colonisation prior to knee arthroplasty: a randomised controlled trial

IF 1.8 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Trine Herskind Hasløv , Cecilie Fuglsbjerg , Anne Kirstine Nielsen , Anne Brun Hesselvig , Blaine Gabriel Fritz , Lene Bay , Tom Møller , Thomas Bjarnsholt , Anders Odgaard
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Despite the widely reported success of knee arthroplasty, studies show that 1.6–3 % of patients undergo revision within the first postoperative year predominantly due to infection. Preoperative skin preparation may potentially decrease the bacterial load and consequently, the risk of periprosthetic joint infections. The effects of hair removal on prosthetic joint infection are inconsistent. Our primary aim was to investigate if hair removal with a clipper influenced skin colonisation and bacterial composition.

Methods

Forty Caucasian male participants who were planned to undergo knee arthroplasty, (mean age 63.8 years), were included. Patients were randomised to hair removal in a within-person study design. As a control, the opposite leg of the patient was used. Swabs were collected prior to hair removal (baseline), immediately after hair removal (Day 0), and with follow-up after one and seven days.

Results

The intervention showed significant decrease in mean log colony-forming units per. cm2 from baseline 2.97 to 2.67 (P<0.01) immediately after hair removal and sustained at Day 1 (P=0.01). At Day 7, the mean was non-significant compared to baseline. The control group did not show any decrease of skin microbiota at follow-up on Day 0, 1 or 7.

No significant differences within the bacterial composition were found between the intervention and control leg at baseline among the six most prevalent detected bacterial species: Staphylococcus epidermidis, Micrococcus luteus, S. hominis, S. capitis, S. haemolyticus and S. aureus. The study did not find any changes in the bacterial composition over time.

Conclusion

Hair removal with a clipper within 24 hours prior to surgery causes a significant non-selective reduction in skin colonisation.

膝关节置换术前用剪子脱毛和微生物定植:随机对照试验
背景尽管膝关节置换术的成功已被广泛报道,但研究表明,1.6%-3%的患者在术后第一年内主要因感染而进行翻修。术前皮肤准备可能会减少细菌负荷,从而降低假体周围关节感染的风险。脱毛对假体关节感染的影响并不一致。我们的主要目的是研究用剪子脱毛是否会影响皮肤定植和细菌组成。方法纳入 40 名计划接受膝关节置换术的白种男性患者(平均年龄 63.8 岁)。在人内研究设计中,患者被随机安排脱毛。对照组使用患者的对侧腿部。脱毛前(基线)、脱毛后(第 0 天)立即收集拭子,并在 1 天和 7 天后进行随访。结果干预显示,脱毛后,每平方厘米平均菌落形成对数单位从基线 2.97 显著降至 2.67(P<0.01),并在第 1 天持续下降(P=0.01)。在第 7 天,平均值与基线相比没有显著变化。在第 0 天、第 1 天或第 7 天的随访中,对照组的皮肤微生物群没有出现任何减少。在基线时,干预组和对照组腿部的细菌组成在检测到的六种最常见细菌中没有发现明显差异:表皮葡萄球菌、黄体小球菌、人葡萄球菌、头癣葡萄球菌、溶血性葡萄球菌和金黄色葡萄球菌。结论:在手术前 24 小时内用剪子拔除头发会导致皮肤定植的非选择性显著减少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Infection Prevention in Practice
Infection Prevention in Practice Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
58
审稿时长
61 days
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