Jahoda D, Nyc O, Pokorný D, Landor I, Sosna A
I. ortopedická klinika 1. LF UK, Praha.
Acta Chir Orthop Traumatol Cech. 2006 Apr;73(2):108-14.
Prophylactic antibiotic treatment is mandatory in every operation involving an orthopedic implant. Carefully selected and correctly administered antibiotics can provide effective protection of the implant from bacterial colonization. The prevention of deep wound infection in joint replacement includes several procedures and measures which constitute three basic groups: 1) Promotion of patient's ability to resist infection (careful pre-operative preparation, elimination of potential infectious loci, good nutritional status, etc). 2) Optimal conditions for the operative wound (surgical technique, prophylactic antibiotics). 3) Reduction of the number of bacteria brought in the wound (control measures, super-sterile operating theatres). Clear rules for the system of prophylactic antibiotic treatment should be adopted. A program in which responsibility for antibiotic administration was shifted from the nursing staff to the anesthesiologist in the operating theatre showed improved outcomes and reduced costs. Poor timing of prophylactic antibiotic administration is one of the basic mistakes. If the wound happened to be contaminated during surgery, the first three post-operative hours would be most decisive for the development of infection. An effective bactericidal concentration of antibiotic should be present in tissues and serum immediately after surgery has begun. Therefore the appropriate time for antibiotic application is before a skin incision is made, and not after the operation has started; the highest serum and bone tissue levels appear 20 to 30 min. after intravenous antibiotic injection. To allow antibiotics to reach target tissues, they should be introduced at least 10 min. before tourniquet application. For long surgical procedures or when blood loss is high, an additional dose of antibiotics is recommended during the operation. If a sample for bacterial cultivation is required, antibiotic administration is postponed until during surgery. However, this is used only in indicated cases when deep infection is suspected and no assessment of the causative agent is available. Otherwise this approach carries a high risk of infectious complications in aseptic revision arthroplasty. Long-term, unjustified administration of antibiotics leads to an increase in resistance to the antibiotic involved. Some studies show that a day's course is as effective as a seven-day one. A shorter antibiotic course decreases the costs, reduces side-effects and minimizes the development of resistance. An optimal duration of antibiotic treatment has not been defined yet, and is still a hot issue for discussion. Many authors recommend one pre-operative antibiotic dose and, according to the kind of antibiotic, agree to its 24-hour administration in order to lower the toxic effect of antibiotic and to prevent selection of resistant microorganisms. The choice of suitable antibiotics for prophylactic treatment should be based on the range of agents causing joint replacement infections and the pharmacological properties of the drug. This should have minimal toxicity, should be well tolerated by the patient and, from the epidemiological point of view, should have a low risk of inducing resistance because of frequent use. Naturally, it is not possible to include all antibiotics against all causative agents and therefore attention should be paid, in the first place, to Gram-positive bacteria, i. e., staphylococci and streptococci, which are the most common causes of infectious complications associated with joint replacement. Because of difficulties related to the right choice of antibiotic, it is recommended to keep a record of complications in each patient in order to provide feedback and to facilitate the establishment of reliable antibiotic-based prevention. The prevention of infection in orthopedics is a comprehensive issue. It cannot be expected that prophylactic antibiotic treatment will compensate for mistakes made in operative protocols, for inadequate operative techniques, for shortcomings in operating theatre equipment or insufficient preparation of patients.
在每一台涉及骨科植入物的手术中,预防性抗生素治疗都是必不可少的。精心挑选并正确使用抗生素能够有效保护植入物免受细菌定植。关节置换手术中预防深部伤口感染包括多项程序和措施,可分为三个基本类别:1)提高患者抗感染能力(细致的术前准备、消除潜在感染源、良好的营养状况等)。2)为手术伤口创造最佳条件(手术技巧、预防性抗生素)。3)减少伤口带入的细菌数量(控制措施、超无菌手术室)。应采用明确的预防性抗生素治疗体系规则。一项将手术室中抗生素给药责任从护理人员转移至麻醉医生的方案显示出了更好的效果并降低了成本。预防性抗生素给药时机不当是基本错误之一。如果手术过程中伤口发生污染,术后头三个小时对于感染的发生最为关键。手术一开始,组织和血清中就应立即存在有效的抗生素杀菌浓度。因此,抗生素的合适应用时间是在皮肤切口之前,而非手术开始之后;静脉注射抗生素后20至30分钟血清和骨组织水平达到最高。为使抗生素到达靶组织,应在使用止血带前至少10分钟给药。对于长时间手术或失血量大的情况,建议在手术期间额外追加一剂抗生素。如果需要采集细菌培养样本,抗生素给药应推迟至手术期间。然而,这仅在怀疑深部感染且无法评估病原体的特定情况下使用。否则,这种方法在无菌翻修关节成形术中会带来较高的感染并发症风险。长期不合理使用抗生素会导致对所涉抗生素的耐药性增加。一些研究表明,一天的疗程与七天的疗程效果相同。较短的抗生素疗程可降低成本、减少副作用并使耐药性的产生降至最低。抗生素治疗的最佳时长尚未确定,仍是一个热议的话题。许多作者推荐术前一剂抗生素,并根据抗生素种类同意其24小时给药,以降低抗生素的毒性作用并防止耐药微生物的产生。预防性治疗中合适抗生素的选择应基于导致关节置换感染的病原体范围以及药物的药理学特性。其毒性应最小,患者耐受性良好,并且从流行病学角度来看,因频繁使用而诱导耐药性的风险应较低。当然,不可能涵盖针对所有病原体的所有抗生素,因此首先应关注革兰氏阳性菌,即葡萄球菌和链球菌,它们是与关节置换相关的感染并发症最常见的病因。由于正确选择抗生素存在困难,建议记录每位患者的并发症情况,以便提供反馈并促进建立可靠的基于抗生素的预防措施。骨科感染的预防是一个综合性问题。不能期望预防性抗生素治疗能够弥补手术方案中的失误、手术技术的不足、手术室设备的缺陷或患者准备不充分的问题。