Surgical site infection in colorectal surgery


Autoria(s): Preto, Vera; Alves, Maria José; Silva, Norberto; Martins, Matilde
Data(s)

20/10/2016

20/10/2016

2016

Resumo

Surgical Site Infection is one of the most common infection associated with health care, but can also be the most preventable situation. Surgical site infection in patients undergoing colorectal surgery varies according to the literature, from 3.5 to 21.3%, being identiied as the highest rate of infection among elective procedures and emergency. Objectives: To identify and characterize the occurrence of surgical site infection in patients undergoing colorectal surgery at a hospital in northern Portugal. Methods: A prospective study in a hospital in the north of Portugal in 2015, patients admitted to the surgical service who underwent colorectal surgery. Patients were selected more than 24 hours of admission, obtaining a sample of 102 participants. The characterization of the patient and the surgery was done using a search in the irst 24 hours after surgery and the registration of the infection at the time of occurrence and 30 days after the intervention. Results: 102 participants, 67 (65.7%) were male with a mean age of 71.92 years (37-93 years) and 40.2% underwent emergency surgery. There was a prevalence of surgical site infection in 21 patients (20.6%). Among these 15 were male (71.4%) with mean age of 72.24 years. They were hospitalized on average 22 days, with an average of 19 days of hospitalization after surgery. Escherichia-coli was the microorganism most frequently isolated in culture studies with 13 (60.0%) cases of surgical site infection and organ/space was the main site identiied with infection - 38.1%. Conclusions: The prevalence of surgical site infection was 5.1% and Escherichia coli most common etiologic agent. It is suggested that other studies can analyze the associated factors with this type of infection.

Identificador

Preto, Vera; Alves, Maria José; Silva, Norberto; Martins, Matilde (2016) - Surgical site infection in colorectal surgery. Atención Primaria. ISSN 0212-6567. 48 (espec. cong 1), p. 107-107

0212-6567

http://hdl.handle.net/10198/13418

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier

Direitos

openAccess

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Palavras-Chave #Surgical site infection #Colorectal surgery
Tipo

conferenceObject