Institute for Research in Operative Medicine, Chair of Surgical Research, Faculty of Health, School of Medicine, Witten/Herdecke University, Witten, Germany.
Department of Surgery, Helios University Hospital Wuppertal, Witten/Herdecke University, Heusnerstr. 40, 42283, Wuppertal, Germany.
Syst Rev. 2018 Oct 5;7(1):152. doi: 10.1186/s13643-018-0813-7.
Surgical site infection describes an infectious complication of surgical wounds. This single complication is thought to occur in close to 20% of surgical cases. This complication has been described in all kinds of surgical procedure including minimally invasive procedures. Wound irrigation is frequently used as a means of reducing surgical site infection. However, there is lack of solid evidence to support routine wound irrigation. The aim of this review is to provide evidence for the efficacy of routine wound irrigation with normal saline in preventing surgical site infection. The rate of surgical site infection in cases with and without wound irrigation will be analyzed.
METHODS/DESIGN: Systematic literature searches will be conducted to identify all published and unpublished studies. The following databases will be searched for citations from inception to present: MEDLINE (via PubMed), Embase (via Embase), and CENTRAL (via the Cochrane library). The search strategy will be developed by the research team in collaboration with an experienced librarian and checked by a referee according to the Peer Review of Electronic Search Strategies (PRESS) guideline. A draft of the PubMed search strategy could be (irrigation[tiab] OR "Therapeutic Irrigation"[mesh] OR lavage[tiab]) AND (saline[tiab] OR "Sodium Chloride"[mesh] OR sodium chloride[tiab]) NOT ("Comment" [Publication Type] OR "Letter" [Publication Type] OR "Editorial" [Publication Type]). No time limits will be set. The reference lists of eligible articles will be hand searched. Relevant data will be extracted from eligible studies using a previously designed data extraction sheet. Relative risks will be calculated for binary outcomes and mean differences or standardized mean differences, if necessary, for continuous outcomes. For all measures, 95% confidence levels will be calculated. Both arms would be compared with regard to the rate of surgical site infection within 30 days following surgery. We will report the review using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) statement.
This review aims at investigating the value of routine wound irrigation using normal saline in preventing surgical site infection.
PROSPERO: CRD42018082287.
手术部位感染是指手术伤口的感染并发症。据认为,这种单一的并发症在近 20%的手术病例中发生。这种并发症已经在各种手术程序中描述过,包括微创手术。伤口冲洗经常被用作减少手术部位感染的一种手段。然而,缺乏确凿的证据支持常规伤口冲洗。本综述的目的是提供使用生理盐水常规冲洗伤口预防手术部位感染的疗效证据。将分析有冲洗和无冲洗的手术部位感染发生率。
方法/设计:系统文献检索将用于识别所有已发表和未发表的研究。将从成立到现在搜索以下数据库中的引文:MEDLINE(通过 PubMed)、Embase(通过 Embase)和 CENTRAL(通过 Cochrane 图书馆)。研究团队将与经验丰富的图书馆员合作制定搜索策略,并根据同行评审电子搜索策略(PRESS)指南由评审员检查。可拟定的 PubMed 搜索策略为(irrigation[tiab] 或“Therapeutic Irrigation”[mesh] 或 lavage[tiab])和(saline[tiab] 或“Sodium Chloride”[mesh] 或 sodium chloride[tiab])NOT(“Comment” [Publication Type] 或“Letter” [Publication Type] 或“Editorial” [Publication Type])。不设时间限制。将手动搜索合格文章的参考文献列表。使用预先设计的数据提取表从合格研究中提取相关数据。对于二项结局,将计算相对风险,对于连续结局,必要时将计算均值差或标准化均数差。对于所有措施,将计算 95%置信水平。将比较两组在手术后 30 天内手术部位感染的发生率。我们将使用系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)声明报告综述。
本综述旨在调查使用生理盐水常规冲洗伤口预防手术部位感染的价值。
PROSPERO:CRD42018082287。