The promotional effect of bone wax on experimental Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis
- PMID: 2359338
The promotional effect of bone wax on experimental Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis
Abstract
The consequences of using surgical bone wax are not well studied. We evaluated the infection-promoting potential of sterile bone wax in a rat model of chronic Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis. The addition of bone wax greatly reduced the quantitative bacterial inoculum (log colony-forming units) required to establish chronic osteomyelitis in 50% and 100% of challenged animals. The 50% infection rate was reduced from log 6.9 to 2.6 and the 100% infection rate from 8.2 to 4.4, respectively (p less than 0.015, t test for parallelism). Separate experiments were done 10 to 30 minutes after inoculation with only log 6.4 staphylococci. Tibiae of animals that received bone wax yielded more organisms than those that did not (log 2.76 +/- 0.68 versus 1.72 +/- 0.94, p less than 0.01). At 24 hours quantitative colony counts were not significantly different whether animals received wax or not (log 5.02 +/- 0.42 versus 4.43 +/- 0.65, p greater than 0.09). These studies suggest that the routine surgical use of bone wax should be reassessed.
Comment in
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Invited letter concerning: the promotional effect of bone wax on experimental Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis and postoperative mediastinitis--a comparison of two electrocautery techniques on presternal soft tissues.J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 1991 Jun;101(6):1109. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 1991. PMID: 2038206 No abstract available.
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