Glove and instrument changing to prevent bacterial contamination in infected wound debridement and closure procedures: A prospective observational study

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Abstract

Many surgeons use a single table of instruments for both excisional debridement and coverage/closure of infected wounds. This study investigates the effectiveness of a two-table set-up of sterile instruments, in addition to glove exchange, to reduce instrument cross-contamination during these procedures. This is a prospective, single-site, institutional review board-approved observational study of surgical debridements of infected wounds over a 17-month period. Two separate sterile surgical tables were used for each case: Table A for initial wound debridement (debridement set-up) and Table B for wound coverage/closure (clean set-up). Swabs of each table and its respective instruments were taken after debridement but prior to coverage/closure. The primary outcome of interest was bacterial growth at 48 hours. There were 72 surgical cases included in this study. Culture results of Table A demonstrated bacterial growth in 23 of 72 (32%) cases at 48 hours compared with 5of 72 (7%) from Table B (P =.001). These data suggest that there is significant bacterial contamination of surgical instruments used for debridement of infected wounds. Use of a two-table set-up reduced instrument cross-contamination by 78%, suggesting avoidable re-contamination of the wound.

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APA

Carroll, A. M., Kim, K. G., Walters, E. T., Phillips, B. K., Singh, B., Dekker, P. K., … Evans, K. K. (2021). Glove and instrument changing to prevent bacterial contamination in infected wound debridement and closure procedures: A prospective observational study. International Wound Journal, 18(5), 664–669. https://doi.org/10.1111/iwj.13568

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