Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4095270 | Spine Deformity | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The authors showed that their cohort of patients with infection had a high rate of draining wounds, MRSA infections, administration of antibiotics more than 1 hour ahead of incision, and prolonged need for intravenous access after surgery. Efforts to mitigate these associations by using vancomycin prophylactically, doing meticulous wound closure to prevent drainage or dehiscence, and delivering antibiotics at an optimal time ahead of incision may lead to a decrease in infection rates in pediatric spinal surgery. Future prospective studies will be needed to validate this.
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Authors
Sina MD, Freeman MD, Kirk MD, Suken A. MD, Susan PAC, Laurens MD, PhD,