779 research outputs found

    Occurrence of fever in the first postoperative week does not help to diagnose infection in clean orthopaedic surgery

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    Postoperative fever is often misinterpreted as a sign of infection, especially when occurring after the third postoperative day. We assessed the epidemiology of postoperative fever in adult orthopaedic patients and its association with infection. Among 1,073 patients participating in a prospective observational study, 198 (19%) had a postoperative fever (>38°C). Thirteen patients (1.2%) had a surgical site infection and 78 patients (7.3%) had remote bacterial infections during their hospital stay. Including asymptomatic bacteriuria, 174 patients were given antibiotic therapy for a median duration of six days. In multivariate analysis, no clinical parameter was associated with fever, including haematoma (odds ratio 0.9, 95%CI 0.6-1.3), infection (1.6, 0.7-3.7), or antibiotic use (1.6, 0.9-3.0). The maximum temperature on each of the first seven postoperative days did not differ between infected and uninfected patients (Wilcoxon rank-sum tests; p > 0.10). We conclude that fever, even up to the seventh postoperative day, is not substantially helpful to distinguish infection from general inflammation in clean orthopaedic surger

    The Value of Bacterial Culture During Clean Orthopedic Surgery a Prospective Study of 1,036 Patients

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    Abstract Objective: To determine whether bacterial cultures of the wounds of patients undergoing clean orthopedic surgery would help predict infection. Methods: During 1 year, 1,256 cultures were performed for 1,102 patients who underwent clean orthopedic surgery. Results were analyzed to evaluate their ability to predict postoperative infection. Results: The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of the cultures were 38%, 92%, 7%, and 99%, respectively. Conclusions: Cultures performed during clean orthopedic surgery were not useful for predicting postoperative infectio

    Poor performance of microbiological sampling in the prediction of recurrent arthroplasty infection

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    During a two-stage revision for prosthetic joint infections (PJI), joint aspirations, open tissue sampling and serum inflammatory markers are performed before re-implantation to exclude ongoing silent infection. We investigated the performance of these diagnostic procedures on the risk of recurrence of PJI among asymptomatic patients undergoing a two-stage revision. A total of 62 PJI were found in 58 patients. All patients had intra-operative surgical exploration during re-implantation, and 48 of them had intra-operative microbiological swabs. Additionally, 18 joint aspirations and one open biopsy were performed before second-stage reimplantation. Recurrence or persistence of PJI occurred in 12 cases with a mean delay of 218days after re-implantation, but only four pre- or intraoperative invasive joint samples had grown a pathogen in cultures. In at least seven recurrent PJIs (58%), patients had a normal C-reactive protein (CRP, <10mg/l) level before re-implantation. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive and negative predictive values of pre-operative invasive joint aspiration and CRP for the prediction of PJI recurrence was 0.58, 0.88, 0.5, 0.84 and 0.17, 0.81, 0.13, 0.86, respectively. As a conclusion, pre-operative joint aspiration, intraoperative bacterial sampling, surgical exploration and serum inflammatory markers are poor predictors of PJI recurrence. The onset of reinfection usually occurs far later than reimplantatio

    Excess Spin and the Dynamics of Antiferromagnetic Ferritin

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    Temperature-dependent magnetization measurements on a series of synthetic ferritin proteins containing from 100 to 3000 Fe(III) ions are used to determine the uncompensated moment of these antiferromagnetic particles. The results are compared with recent theories of macroscopic quantum coherence which explicitly include the effect of this excess moment. The scaling of the excess moment with protein size is consistent with a simple model of finite size effects and sublattice noncompensation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Postsript figures, 1 table. Submitted to PR

    Noninfectious Wound Complications in Clean Surgery: Epidemiology, Risk Factors, and Association with Antibiotic Use

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    Background: Noninfectious wound complications are frequent and often are confused with and treated as infection. Methods: We assessed the epidemiology, impact, risk factors, and associations with antibiotic use of noninfectious wound complications in clean orthopedic and trauma surgery. We report a single-center, prospective, observational study in an orthopedic department. Results: Among 1,073 adult patients, 630 (59%) revealed clinically relevant postoperative noninfectious wound complications, leading to a significant prolongation of hospital stay (14 vs. 12days; Wilcoxon rank-sum test; p<0.02) compared with patients without complications. The most frequent and severe complications were discharge with dehiscence (n=437; 41%) and hematoma (n=379; 35%). Forty-seven patients (47/630; 7%) underwent reoperation for dehiscence (n=39) or hematoma (n=8). These patients made up 4.3% of the entire study population (47/1,073). In multivariate analysis, an ASA score ≥2 points, age≥60years, surgery duration for ≥90min, implant-related surgery, and poor compliance toward nurses' recommendations were pronounced risk factors for these complications, whereas antibiotic-related parameters had no influence. Staple use was significantly associated with wound discharge but not with hematoma. Conclusions: Wound complications, such as dehiscence with discharge or hematoma after clean orthopedic and trauma surgery, are frequent with an overall incidence of 60%. Although they lead to few surgical reinterventions, they prolong hospital stay by 2days. Few clinical parameters show association with wound complications. Among them, improvements of patient compliance and avoidance of staples use for skin closure are the most promising actions to decrease complication ris
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