2.An understanding of burn infection.
Chinese Journal of Burns 2008;24(3):164-166
Burn infection occurs when pathogenic bacteria colonized on the burn wound surface, and they then invaded the viable tissue causing sepsis or sepsis with blood stream invasion. This infection pattern is particular to burn injury. Both in a model of pseudomonas burn wound sepsis and a clinical study of early eschar excision for bacteria quantification indicate that the bacteria not only are located on the burn wound surface but also invaded the deeper tissues. Finally, the bacteria penetrate into the neighboring viable tissue and even blood vessels. Therefore, we can say that burn infection is from local wound infection to invasive infection, and finally sepsis is developed ,and it is termed as burn wound sepsis. The cutoff count of subeschar tissue bacteria is 10(5)/g. However, the burn wound sepsis may not occur when the number of subeschar tissue bacteria reaches 10(5)/g. The criteria for the diagnosis of burn wound sepsis are mainly listed as below: (1) The number of bacteria in the subeschar reaches > or =10(5)/g. (2) Bacteria can be detected in the biopsy specimen. (3) Sepsis associated symptoms and signs. However, the sepsis associated symptoms and signs must be obvious in patients to make the clinical diagnosis of burn wound sepsis. If the sepsis associated symptoms and signs do not appear, we should not make the diagnosis of burn wound sepsis eyen with the number of bacteria in the subeschar tissue reaching 10(5)/g or bacteria can be found in the biopsy specimen. Sepsis has been defined as the body % response to bacteria and their products. The occurrence of sepsis depends primarily on immune function and stress response intensity, and it is closely related to wound infection degree such as bacteria density and invasion depth in the burn wound, or plasma endotoxin level to certain extent.
Bacterial Infections
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etiology
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Burns
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microbiology
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Humans
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Sepsis
;
etiology
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Wound Infection
;
etiology
3.To further enhance the comprehensive prevention and treatment of burn infection.
Chinese Journal of Burns 2015;31(1):9-10
Comprehensive prevention and treatment of burn infection should be further enhanced, as monotonous treatment is prone to fail to get satisfying curative effects. In the articles to be published in this issue, causative factors for burn infection are analyzed in depth and discussed from different angles, and they will lay the foundation for the comprehensive prevention and treatment of burn infection.
Burns
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complications
;
prevention & control
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therapy
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Humans
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Infection Control
;
methods
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Wound Infection
;
etiology
;
prevention & control
4.A Case of Chromobacterium Infection after Car Accident in Korea.
Myeong Hee KIM ; Hee Joo LEE ; Jin Tae SUH ; Boo Soon CHANG ; Kyu Seok CHO
Yonsei Medical Journal 2005;46(5):700-702
Chromobacterium violaceum is a gram negative straight rod, 0.8-1.2 by 2.5 to 6.0 m, which is motile by one polar flagella and one to four lateral flagella. The organism inhabits soil and water and is often found in semitropical and tropical climates. Infections in humans are rare. We report a case of infection caused by strains of C. violaceum. A 38-year-old male patient was admitted to KyungHee University Hospital, Seoul, Korea on July 28th, 2003, after a car accident. The patient had multiple trauma and lacerations. He had an open wound in the left tibial area from which C. violaceum was isolated. The strain was resistant to ampicillin, tobramycin, ampicillin/sulbactam, ceftriaxone and cefepime, but was susceptible to amikacin, gentamicin, ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole and piperacillin/tazobactam. The patient was treated successfully by debridement, cephapirin sodium and astromicine sulfate.
Wound Infection/*etiology
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Male
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Humans
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Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections/*etiology
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Chromobacterium/*isolation & purification
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Adult
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*Accidents, Traffic
5.Current practice in the prevention and management of surgical site infections in gastrointestinal surgery.
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2012;15(6):533-536
Surgical site infection(SSI) is one of post-operative complications in gastrointestinal surgery. SSI may increase the morbidity and mortality of surgical patients and increase their hospital stay and expense. The risk factors can come from patients, physicians and hospital environments. Improving patients nutritional status and organ function, appropriate control of blood sugar level and abstinence from smoking can reduce the occurrence of SSI. Compare to current practice in China, the following recommendations have been identified as priorities for implementation: hair removal done immediately before operation; maintenance of normothermia intraoperatively; the abdominal wall should be closed with an absorbable suture and drains should be removed as early as possible. SSI could be diagnosed by symptoms, local signs and lab examinations and confirmed by physician. Source control is the key point in the management of SSI. Ultrasound and CT guided percutaneous abscess drainage is effective in the localized deep space surgical site infection and critically ill patients. Antibiotics should be used following clinical assessment and evidence based on local formulary.
Digestive System Surgical Procedures
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adverse effects
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Humans
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Infection Control
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Risk Factors
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Surgical Wound Infection
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diagnosis
;
etiology
;
prevention & control
;
therapy
7.Risk Factors for Surgical Site Infection after Conversion from Laparoscopic to Open Cholecystectomy.
Xiang GAO ; Ting-Kai YANG ; Jian-Chun XIAO ; Qiang QU ; Tao HONG
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2021;43(3):402-405
Objective To investigate the incidence of surgical site infection(SSI)following conversion from laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy and to analyze the related risk factors. Methods The clinical data of 179 patients who had experienced conversion from laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy in Peking Union Medical College Hospital from January 2014 to August 2019 were analyzed retrospectively.Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed to evaluate the associations between clinical variables and SSI. Results The incidence of SSI was 19.0%(34/179)after conversion from laparoscopic to open cholecystectomy.The multivariable analysis demonstrated that preoperative endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography(ERCP)(
Cholecystectomy
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Humans
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Laparoscopy
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Retrospective Studies
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Risk Factors
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Surgical Wound Infection/etiology*
8.Risk factors of postoperative surgical site infection in colon cancer based on a single center database.
Yu Chen GUO ; Rui SUN ; Bin WU ; Guo Le LIN ; Hui Zhong QIU ; Ke Xuan LI ; Wen Yun HOU ; Xi Yu SUN ; Bei Zhan NIU ; Jiao Lin ZHOU ; Jun Yang LU ; Lin CONG ; Lai XU ; Yi XIAO
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2022;25(3):242-249
Objective: To explore the incidence and risk factors of postoperative surgical site infection (SSI) after colon cancer surgery. Methods: A retrospective case-control study was performed. Patients diagnosed with colon cancer who underwent radical surgery between January 2016 and May 2021 were included, and demographic characteristics, comorbidities, laboratory tests, surgical data and postoperative complications were extracted from the specialized prospective database at Department of General Surgery, Peking Union Medical College Hospital. Case exclusion criteria: (1) simultaneously multiple primary colon cancer; (2) segmental resection, subtotal colectomy, or total colectomy; (3) patients undergoing colostomy/ileostomy during the operation or in the state of colostomy/ileostomy before the operation; (4) patients receiving natural orifice specimen extraction surgery or transvaginal colon surgery; (5) patients with the history of colectomy; (6) emergency operation due to intestinal obstruction, perforation and acute bleeding; (7) intestinal diversion operation; (8) benign lesions confirmed by postoperative pathology; (9) patients not following the colorectal clinical pathway of our department for intestinal preparation and antibiotic application. Univariate analysis and multivariate analysis were used to determine the risk factors of SSI after colon cancer surgery. Results: A total of 1291 patients were enrolled in the study. 94.3% (1217/1291) of cases received laparoscopic surgery. The incidence of overall SSI was 5.3% (69/1291). According to tumor location, the incidence of SSI in the right colon, transverse colon, left colon and sigmoid colon was 8.6% (40/465), 5.2% (11/213), 7.1% (7/98) and 2.1% (11/515) respectively. According to resection range, the incidence of SSI after right hemicolectomy, transverse colectomy, left hemicolectomy and sigmoid colectomy was 8.2% (48/588), 4.5% (2/44), 4.8% (8 /167) and 2.2% (11/492) respectively. Univariate analysis showed that preoperative BUN≥7.14 mmol/L, tumor site, resection range, intestinal anastomotic approach, postoperative diarrhea, anastomotic leakage, postoperative pneumonia, and anastomotic technique were related to SSI (all P<0.05). Multivariate analysis revealed that anastomotic leakage (OR=22.074, 95%CI: 6.172-78.953, P<0.001), pneumonia (OR=4.100, 95%CI: 1.546-10.869, P=0.005), intracorporeal anastomosis (OR=5.288, 95%CI: 2.919-9.577,P<0.001) were independent risk factors of SSI. Subgroup analysis showed that in right hemicolectomy, the incidence of SSI in intracorporeal anastomosis was 19.8% (32/162), which was significantly higher than that in extracorporeal anastomosis (3.8%, 16/426, χ(2)=40.064, P<0.001). In transverse colectomy [5.0% (2/40) vs. 0, χ(2)=0.210, P=1.000], left hemicolectomy [5.4% (8/148) vs. 0, χ(2)=1.079, P=0.599] and sigmoid colectomy [2.1% (10/482) vs. 10.0% (1/10), χ(2)=2.815, P=0.204], no significant differences of SSI incidence were found between intracorporeal anastomosis and extracorporeal anastomosis (all P>0.05). Conclusions: The incidence of SSI increases with the resection range from sigmoid colectomy to right hemicolectomy. Intracorporeal anastomosis and postoperative anastomotic leakage are independent risk factors of SSI. Attentions should be paid to the possibility of postoperative pneumonia and actively effective treatment measures should be carried out.
Case-Control Studies
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Colonic Neoplasms/surgery*
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Humans
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Retrospective Studies
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Risk Factors
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Surgical Wound Infection/etiology*
9.Nontuberculous Mycobacterial Tenosynovitis in the Hand: Two Case Reports with the MR Imaging Findings.
Hyun Jung YOON ; Jong Won KWON ; Young Cheol YOON ; Sang Hee CHOI
Korean Journal of Radiology 2011;12(6):745-749
Nontuberculous mycobacterial infections can cause destructive tenosynovitis of the hand. We report on and discuss the clinical course and distinctive radiologic findings of two patients with hand tenosynovitis secondary to M. marinum and intracellulare infection, which are different from those of the nontuberculous mycobacterial infections reported in the previous literature.
Female
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*Hand/radiography
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Humans
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Male
;
Middle Aged
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Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous/*diagnosis/etiology/radiography
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Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare Infection/*diagnosis/etiology/radiography
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*Mycobacterium marinum
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Surgical Wound Infection/complications
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Tenosynovitis/diagnosis/*microbiology/radiography
;
Wound Infection/complications
10.An investigation on surgical-site infection among post cesarean section patients with Burkholderia cepacia contaminated ultrasonic couplant.
Man WANG ; Lijie ZHANG ; Shenglin XIA ; Haidong WU ; Ruihong ZHANG ; Mugeng FAN ; Tao WANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2014;35(5):566-568
OBJECTIVEIn May 2013, an abnormal increase of surgical-site infection among post cesarean section patients was reported at one hospital in Zhongshan. An investigation was conducted to identify the risk factors and related control measures.
METHODSAll the reported surgical-site infection records among post cesarean section patients were checked. A review of cesarean section schedules of health workers was also performed. An 1 : 2 case-control study was conducted among surgical-site infection cases in May 2013. Microbiologic cultures were performed on 2 surgical site secretion samples and 12 samples from the environment. All the positive isolates were molecular typed by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE).
RESULTSIn May 2013, 4 post cesarean section patients who developed surgical-site infection symptom at one hospital in Zhongshan were reported, with an attack rate as 10.3% (4/39). The emergence time of symptom was 2-3 days after operation. All of the 4 cases underwent an emergency operation. The median time interval for cases from admission to operation was 7.2 hours (ranged from 2 to 9 hours), lower than that seen in the controls, with a median time of 20.8 hours (Z = 5.50, P = 0.03). Two of the 4 cases took type-B ultrasonic inspection 1.4 h and 8.4 h before the operation, and the other two cases took continuous fetal heart monitoring 2 hours before the operation. Skin of the operation area on the 4 cases had been exposed to ultrasonic couplant, without a thorough clean. The proportion of type-B ultrasonic inspection or continuous fetal heart monitoring was much higher in cases than in controls (χ² = 5.19, P = 0.01). Burkholderia cepacia (BC) isolates were discovered from:one surgical site secretion, 2 type-B ultrasonic probe samples, one ultrasonic couplant in use and one ultrasonic couplant unopened. All the isolates were identified as 100% identical by PFGE.
CONCLUSIONThe skin of operation area of cesarean section patients had been exposed to BC contaminated ultrasonic couplant without thorough cleaning, which seemed to be related to the outbreak of surgical-site infection, in our case.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Burkholderia cepacia ; Case-Control Studies ; Cesarean Section ; Cross Infection ; etiology ; Equipment Contamination ; Female ; Humans ; Pregnancy ; Surgical Wound Infection ; etiology ; Young Adult