Wound Infections After Transplant Nephrectomy
- 1 May 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 115 (5) , 645-646
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1980.01380050067015
Abstract
• Wound infections after transplant nephrectomy were analyzed retrospectively. When prophylactic antibiotics were not used, 20% of the closed nephrectomy wounds became infected. Eighty-one percent of the infections were due to staphylococcal organisms. Wounds containing a preexisting focus of infection or those reoperated on more than once within a month prior to nephrectomy are at such high risk for infection that these wounds should be left open for secondary healing. With the use of prophylactic cefazolin sodium, in the immediate preoperative and postoperative period, no wound infections have occurred in 18 closed transplant nephrectomy wounds. (Arch Surg 115:645-646, 1980)This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Infection in Kidney TransplantationPublished by Springer Nature ,2018
- Factors Contributing to the Declining Mortality Rate in Renal TransplantationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1978
- TRANSPLANTATION OF CHILDRENS KIDNEYS INTO ADULT RECIPIENTS1978
- Use of Systemic Antibiotics for Prophylaxis in SurgeryArchives of Surgery, 1977
- Wound Infections in Renal Transplant WoundsAnnals of Surgery, 1975
- The reduction of surgical wound infections by prophylactic parenteral cephaloridine: A controlled clinical trialBritish Journal of Surgery, 1973
- Wound Complications in Recipients of Renal TransplantsAnnals of Surgery, 1973
- The Period and Nature of Hazard in Clinical Renal TransplantationAnnals of Surgery, 1969