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

Pub Date : 2022-08-02 eCollection Date: 2022-07-01 DOI:10.1055/s-0042-1749425
Suchin Dhamnaskar, Sumit Mandal, Mandar Koranne, Pratik Patil
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

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.

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择期腹部手术术前手术部位脱毛:对手术部位感染有影响吗?
术后手术部位感染(SSI)是外科患者院内感染的主要负担。手术部位剃毛作为术前准备的一部分是很普遍的做法。关于剃须治疗ssi的利与弊还不确定。手术部位的毛发在手术前通常通过剃须去除。我们进行这项研究是为了寻找术前剃毛对术后SSI的影响。方法对择期腹部手术患者进行前瞻性比较队列研究。我们在免疫功能正常的患者中纳入清洁手术和清洁污染手术,其中一半患者在手术前剃须,另一半不剃须。其他混杂因素如皮肤清洁、手术无菌技术、抗生素预防和治疗、术后伤口护理等均按护理顺序进行。在术后第7、14和30天评估患者SSI的存在和分级。结果采用卡方检验和Fischer精确检验在整个样本和人口统计学亚组中进行统计学分析。结果SSI总发生率为11.42%。在术后第7天、第14天和第30天这三个不同的评估时间线上,术前剃须手术部位脱毛患者(232例)和未剃须患者(232例)的SSI发生率无统计学差异。术前行手术部位剃须脱毛的患者发生SSI的绝对人数较多,但差异无统计学意义(p > 0.05)。但在亚组分析中,清洁污染手术患者(p = 0.037)和手术持续时间少于2小时的患者(Fischer精确值= 0.034)在第14天,剃须组的SSI明显高于未剃须组。结论根据我们的研究结果,除了清洁污染手术亚组和持续时间少于2小时的手术外,术前剃须没有显著增加总体SSI。因此,特别是在这些患者术前避免手术部位剃毛可作为感染控制措施之一。
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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