4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Factors affecting wound infection rates in head and neck surgery

Journal

OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD AND NECK SURGERY
Volume 123, Issue 3, Pages 328-333

Publisher

MOSBY, INC
DOI: 10.1067/mhn.2000.105253

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PURPOSE: This study was planned with 2 goals in mind: to evaluate the efficacy of prolonged and 1-day antibiotic regimens for prophylaxis and to evaluate the effect of various factors such as neck dissection, localization and stage of tumor, type of laryngectomy, and history of prior radiotherapy, tracheotomy, and diabetes mellitus on postoperative wound infection rates. METHODS AND MATERIAL: In this study, 408 head and neck procedures (201 clean and 207 clean-contaminated) performed at our institution were retrospectively reviewed. RESULTS: Prolonged and I-day antibiotic regimens for both clean and clean-contaminated procedures were similar in efficacy (7% vs 3% for clean procedures (P = 0.165) and 30% vs 28% for clean-contaminated procedures (P = 0.777)). The wound infection rate wets higher (13%) after clean radical neck dissections versus other clean procedures (1%) (P = 0.001). For clean-contaminated procedures, factors affecting postoperative wound infection rates were performance of bilateral neck dissections (P = 0.014), disease stage (P = 0.002), type of laryngectomy (P = 0.002), and history of prior tracheotomy (P = 0.006).

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