Antimicrobial Prophylaxis in Surgery (free version)

ASHP Surgical Prophylaxis Guidelines

Antimicrobial Prophylaxis in Surgery GUIDELINES App brought to you courtesy of Guideline Central. Enjoy!

Issue link: https://eguideline.guidelinecentral.com/i/109326

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 4 of 15

Treatment Table 2. Specific Sites of an Organ/Space SSIa Arterial or venous infection Mediastinitis Breast abscess or mastitis Meningitis or ventriculitis Disc space Myocarditis or pericarditis Ear, mastoid Oral cavity (mouth, tongue, or gums) Endocarditis Osteomyelitis Endometritis Other infections of the male or female reproductive tract Eye, other than conjunctivitis Other infections of the respiratory tract GI tract Other infections of the urinary tract Hepatitis Sinusitis Intraabdominal, not specified elsewhere Spinal abscess without meningitis Intracranial, brain abscess or dura Upper respiratory tract Joint or bursa Vaginal cuff a Modified from the published guidelines to include recently updated definitions from the NHSN (Procedure Associated Module: Surgical Site Infection Event. Guidelines and procedures for monitoring SSI. January 2013. CDC) ����Antimicrobial prophylaxis may be beneficial in surgical procedures associated with: ������ A high rate of infection (ie, clean-contaminated or contaminated procedures) ������ Prosthetic implants ������ Severe consequences, even if infection is unlikely ����Certain clean procedures may also warrant prophylaxis. Note: While prophylactic antimicrobials are not indicated for some clean surgical procedures, available data suggest that the relative risk reduction of SSI from the use of antimicrobial prophylaxis is the same in clean and in higher-risk procedures. The decision to use or not use prophylaxis depends on the cost of treating and the morbidity associated with infection compared with the cost and morbidity associated with using prophylaxis. ����Antimicrobial prophylaxis is justified for most clean-contaminated procedures where the predominant organisms include Gram-negative rods and enterococci. ����The use of antimicrobial agents for dirty procedures or established infections is classified as treatment of presumed infection, not prophylaxis. ����The selection of an appropriate antimicrobial agent for a specific patient should take into account the characteristics of the ideal agent, comparative efficacy of the antimicrobial agent for the procedure, safety profile, and patient medication allergies. ������ Choose antimicrobial agents with the narrowest spectrum of activity required for efficacy in preventing infection. ������ For patients known to be colonized with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), it is reasonable to add a single preoperative dose of vancomycin to the recommended agent(s). 3

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Antimicrobial Prophylaxis in Surgery (free version) - ASHP Surgical Prophylaxis Guidelines