Download presentation
1
Surgical Infection FY1 Rosalind Pool
2
Pathophysiology of Bacterial Infection
Presence of bacteria Diminished host resistance Skin barrier breached Suitable environment Warm Wet Food source e.g. carbohydrates, proteins
3
Surgical Site Infections
20% of all healthcare-associated infections 5% of patients undergoing surgery develop a surgical site infection Significant effect on patient’s quality of life Increased morbidity Extend hospital stay
4
NICE Guideline 2008 Prevention and Treatment of Surgical Site Infection
Pre-operative Intra-operative Post-operative
5
Pre-operative Patient preparation: Hair removal
Wash on day before or day of surgery Hair removal Electric clippers with a single-use disposable head Antibiotic prophylaxis: Clean surgery involving a prosthesis or implant Clean-contaminated surgery Contaminated surgery Dirty
6
Surgical wound classification
Clean: No contamination from GI, Respiratory or genitourinary tracts. Inguinal hernia repair Clean-contaminated: Minimal contamination from GI, Resp, GU tracts Cholecystectomy, TURP Contaminated: Significant contamination from GI, Resp, GU tracts Elective hemicolectomy Appendicectomy Open traumatic wounds that are more than 12–24 hours old also fall into this category. Dirty or infected: Infection present Perforated appendicectomy Bowel perforation
7
Intra-operative Operating personnel Skin prep
Wash hands Sterile gowns and gloves Skin prep Chlorhexidine or povidone-iodine Maintain patient homeostasis Temperature Oxygenation Organ perfusion Dressing Cover surgical incision
8
Post-operative Dressing of wound Antibiotics Wound care
Aseptic non-touch technique for changing dressings Only shower after 48 hours Antibiotics If infection suspected give antibiotics according to local guidelines Wound care Tissue viability nurse
9
Pyrexia Mild raise is normal early post-op Think 7 Cs
10
Remember these… Cannula Catheter Cut Central line Chest Clot
Collection
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.