Winston K R
Department of Surgery (Neurosurgery), University of Colorado Medical School, Denver.
Neurosurgery. 1992 Aug;31(2):320-9. doi: 10.1227/00006123-199208000-00018.
The value of removing hair in preparation for neurosurgery is addressed in detail. One neurosurgeon's series, accrued over 40 consecutive months, of 638 prospectively examined, consecutive cases is the basis of this report. The overall surgical wound infection rate was 1.1%. The infection rate for the 313 cranial cases was 0.3% and 2.8% for the 218 procedures involving cerebrospinal fluid diversion (shunts). These data are discussed in the context of extensive nonneurosurgical and microbiological literature. It is concluded that the removal of hair by shaving does not lower the risk of surgical wound infection and may increase the risk. A technique for preparing skin and hair for neurosurgery and for the management of hair during neurosurgical procedures is discussed.
详细讨论了神经外科手术前备皮去毛的价值。本报告基于一位神经外科医生连续40个月积累的638例前瞻性检查的连续病例。总体手术伤口感染率为1.1%。313例颅脑手术的感染率为0.3%,218例涉及脑脊液分流(分流术)手术的感染率为2.8%。这些数据是在广泛的非神经外科和微生物学文献背景下进行讨论的。得出的结论是,剃须去毛不会降低手术伤口感染风险,反而可能增加风险。本文还讨论了神经外科手术皮肤和毛发准备以及神经外科手术过程中毛发处理的技术。