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. 2023 Sep 25;68(3.4):201-207.
doi: 10.2739/kurumemedj.MS6834004. Epub 2023 Jun 14.

Risk Factors for Surgical Site Infection in Spinal Surgery and Interventions: A Retrospective Study

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Free article

Risk Factors for Surgical Site Infection in Spinal Surgery and Interventions: A Retrospective Study

Rikiya Saruwatari et al. Kurume Med J. .
Free article

Abstract

Background: Surgical site infection following spinal surgery causes prolonged delay in recovery after surgery, increases cost, and sometimes leads to additional surgical procedures. We investigated risk factors for the occurrence of surgical site infection events in terms of patient-related, surgery-related, and postoperative factors.

Methods: This retrospective study included 1000 patients who underwent spinal surgery in our hospital between April 2016 and March 2019.

Results: Patient-related factors were dementia, length of preoperative hospital stay (≥ 14 days), and diagnosis at the time of surgery (traumatic injury or deformity). The one surgery-related factor was multilevel surgery (≥ 9 intervertebral levels), and the one postoperative factor was time to ambulation (≥ 7 days) were statistically significant risk factors for spinal surgical site infection.

Conclusion: One risk factor identified in this study that is amenable to intervention is time to ambulation. As delayed ambulation is a risk factor for postoperative surgical site infection, how medical staff can intervene in postoperative ambulation to further reduce the incidence of surgical site infection is a topic for future research.

Keywords: complication; risk factor; spinal surgery; surgical site infection.

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