Chlorhexidine–Alcohol versus Povidone–Iodine for Surgical-Site Antisepsis
Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center · Baylor College of Medicine · +6 more institutions
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Abstract
Background
Since the patient's skin is a major source of pathogens that cause surgical-site infection, optimization of preoperative skin antisepsis may decrease postoperative infections. We hypothesized that preoperative skin cleansing with chlorhexidine-alcohol is more protective against infection than is povidone-iodine.
Methods
We randomly assigned adults undergoing clean-contaminated surgery in six hospitals to preoperative skin preparation with either chlorhexidine-alcohol scrub or povidone-iodine scrub and paint. The primary outcome was any surgical-site infection within 30 days after surgery. Secondary outcomes included individual types of surgical-site infections.
Citation impact
1,473
total citations
- FWCI
- 117.36
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Citations per year
Authors
12Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Medicine
- Chlorhexidine
- Iodine
- Surgery
- Alcohol
- Confidence interval
- Antiseptic
- Surgical site infection
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