Publication | Closed Access
Blood transfusion and postoperative wound infection in intracapsular femoral neck fractures.
32
Citations
0
References
1998
Year
Staphylococcus AureusSurgeryOrthopaedic SurgerySkeletal TraumaSurgical Site InfectionsHealthcare-associated InfectionOperative TreatmentSepsisOrthopaedicsWound CareInfection ControlTransfusion MedicineTrauma SurgeryCervical Hip FracturesPatient SafetyWound HealingPostoperative Wound InfectionMedicineProsthetic Joint InfectionsBlood TransfusionEmergency Medicine
The relationship between blood transfusion and postoperative wound infection was studied in 695 operations for cervical hip fractures. A total of 156 (22%) patients were transfused with a total of 392 units of blood. A total of 31 (4.5%) patients developed a postoperative superficial or deep wound infection. Cultures identified Staphylococcus aureus as the cause in 71% and E. coli in 9.7% of the infections. A total of 11 out of 156 (7.05%) transfused patients developed a wound infection. In contrast only 20 out of 539 (3.71%) non-transfused patients developed a wound infection (p < 0.05).