Risk Factors for Surgical Site Infection Following Orthopaedic Spinal Operations
Washington University in St. Louis · Barnes-Jewish Hospital
Abstract
Surgical site infections are not uncommon following spinal operations, and they can be associated with serious morbidity, mortality, and increased resource utilization. The accurate identification of risk factors is essential to develop strategies to prevent these potentially devastating infections. We conducted a case-control study to determine independent risk factors for surgical site infection following orthopaedic spinal operations.
We performed a retrospective case-control study of patients who had had an orthopaedic spinal operation performed at a university-affiliated tertiary-care hospital from 1998 to 2002. Forty-six patients with a superficial, deep, or organ-space surgical site infection were identified and compared with 227 uninfected control patients. Risk factors for surgical site infection were determined with univariate analyses and multivariate logistic regression.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Odds ratio
- Confidence interval
- Univariate analysis
- Risk factor
- Case-control study
- Multivariate analysis
- Logistic regression