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Prevention of SSIs

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2 Key Points ➤ In the preoperative setting, decolonize surgical patients with an anti- staphylococcal agent for cardiothoracic and orthopedic procedures. • Consider decolonization for patients undergoing other procedures at high risk of staphylococcal surgical site infection (SSI), such as those involving prosthetic material. ➤ After a patient's incision is closed, immediately discontinue antibiotics that were administered before and during surgery. • No evidence supports continuing antibiotics after a patient's incision has been closed prevents surgical site infections, even if the incision has drains. • Continuing antibiotics increases the patient's risk of C. difficile infection, acute kidney injury, and antimicrobial resistance. ➤ For patients undergoing elective surgery involving the colon, administer oral antibiotics in addition to parenteral (IV) antibiotics, rather than performing mechanical bowel preparation without oral antibiotics. • Patients who get mechanical bowel preparation without oral antimicrobial agents have more complications. ➤ For patients undergoing cesarean delivery or hysterectomy, use antiseptic-containing preoperative vaginal preparation agents to reduce the risk of endometritis. ➤ Obtain a full allergy history. • 10% of the population reports a penicillin allerg y, but <1% of the population is truly allergic (CDC). Many patients with a self-reported penicillin allerg y can safely receive the antibiotic as prophylaxis. • Understand the nature of the patient's listed allerg y to avoid unnecessary use of less effective antibiotics to prevent SSIs. ➤ Do not routinely use vancomycin for antimicrobial prophylaxis. • Reserve vancomycin for specific clinical situations (e.g., if a patient is known to be colonized with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), and especially if the patient's surgery involves prosthetic material and/or will occur in the setting of an outbreak due to MRSA). ➤ For skin preparation prior to surgical incision, data from recent trials favor CHG-alcohol over povidone-iodine-alcohol. ➤ Perform antiseptic wound lavage intraoperatively. Ensure the sterility of the antiseptic used. • Evidence does not support the use of saline lavage (non-antiseptic lavage). • The authors recommend dilute povidone-iodine lavage rather than antibiotic irrigation.

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