Third day laboratory follow-up

Standard

Third day laboratory follow-up : mandatory for surgical site infections of tibial plateau fractures. / Ballhause, Tobias Malte; Krause, Matthias; Roß, Julien; Rueger, Johannes Maria; Frosch, Karl-Heinz; Klatte, Till Orla.

in: EUR J TRAUMA EMERG S, 29.09.2019.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{2cad8033edff4f5183fbf767975692ed,
title = "Third day laboratory follow-up: mandatory for surgical site infections of tibial plateau fractures",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: Tibial plateau fractures are common fractures in adults and can be extremely challenging for surgeons. State-of-the-art therapy is open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF), although major complications of ORIF are surgical site infections (SSIs). This is especially critical on the proximal tibia, which is only sparsely covered by soft tissue and has a close relation to the knee joint. We analyzed SSIs after ORIF to correlate established laboratory parameters to the occurrence of SSIs.METHODS: A monocentric case-control study in a Level 1 Trauma Center was conducted. Data were acquired from electronic medical records from 2011 until 2016. White blood cell count (WBC) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were used as laboratory parameters and statistically analyzed.RESULTS: In total, 97 patients were included, with four patients suffering from SSIs. Patients with SSIs had a significantly increased WBC count and CRP levels on the third postoperative day. Infection was diagnosed after rehospitalization, 12 ± 4 weeks after initial surgery. Furthermore, a large bony destruction through trauma coincides with a rise of WBC count with no influence on CRP level.CONCLUSION: We highly recommend a laboratory analysis with WBC count and CRP on the third day after ORIF. Patients with a CRP level above 100 mg/l should be closely watched, even if laboratory parameters few days later are adequate-since a one-time increase above this landmark might be a hint regarding the development of a SSI.",
author = "Ballhause, {Tobias Malte} and Matthias Krause and Julien Ro{\ss} and Rueger, {Johannes Maria} and Karl-Heinz Frosch and Klatte, {Till Orla}",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
day = "29",
doi = "10.1007/s00068-019-01232-z",
language = "English",
journal = "EUR J TRAUMA EMERG S",
issn = "1863-9933",
publisher = "Urban und Vogel",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Third day laboratory follow-up

T2 - mandatory for surgical site infections of tibial plateau fractures

AU - Ballhause, Tobias Malte

AU - Krause, Matthias

AU - Roß, Julien

AU - Rueger, Johannes Maria

AU - Frosch, Karl-Heinz

AU - Klatte, Till Orla

PY - 2019/9/29

Y1 - 2019/9/29

N2 - INTRODUCTION: Tibial plateau fractures are common fractures in adults and can be extremely challenging for surgeons. State-of-the-art therapy is open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF), although major complications of ORIF are surgical site infections (SSIs). This is especially critical on the proximal tibia, which is only sparsely covered by soft tissue and has a close relation to the knee joint. We analyzed SSIs after ORIF to correlate established laboratory parameters to the occurrence of SSIs.METHODS: A monocentric case-control study in a Level 1 Trauma Center was conducted. Data were acquired from electronic medical records from 2011 until 2016. White blood cell count (WBC) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were used as laboratory parameters and statistically analyzed.RESULTS: In total, 97 patients were included, with four patients suffering from SSIs. Patients with SSIs had a significantly increased WBC count and CRP levels on the third postoperative day. Infection was diagnosed after rehospitalization, 12 ± 4 weeks after initial surgery. Furthermore, a large bony destruction through trauma coincides with a rise of WBC count with no influence on CRP level.CONCLUSION: We highly recommend a laboratory analysis with WBC count and CRP on the third day after ORIF. Patients with a CRP level above 100 mg/l should be closely watched, even if laboratory parameters few days later are adequate-since a one-time increase above this landmark might be a hint regarding the development of a SSI.

AB - INTRODUCTION: Tibial plateau fractures are common fractures in adults and can be extremely challenging for surgeons. State-of-the-art therapy is open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF), although major complications of ORIF are surgical site infections (SSIs). This is especially critical on the proximal tibia, which is only sparsely covered by soft tissue and has a close relation to the knee joint. We analyzed SSIs after ORIF to correlate established laboratory parameters to the occurrence of SSIs.METHODS: A monocentric case-control study in a Level 1 Trauma Center was conducted. Data were acquired from electronic medical records from 2011 until 2016. White blood cell count (WBC) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were used as laboratory parameters and statistically analyzed.RESULTS: In total, 97 patients were included, with four patients suffering from SSIs. Patients with SSIs had a significantly increased WBC count and CRP levels on the third postoperative day. Infection was diagnosed after rehospitalization, 12 ± 4 weeks after initial surgery. Furthermore, a large bony destruction through trauma coincides with a rise of WBC count with no influence on CRP level.CONCLUSION: We highly recommend a laboratory analysis with WBC count and CRP on the third day after ORIF. Patients with a CRP level above 100 mg/l should be closely watched, even if laboratory parameters few days later are adequate-since a one-time increase above this landmark might be a hint regarding the development of a SSI.

U2 - 10.1007/s00068-019-01232-z

DO - 10.1007/s00068-019-01232-z

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 31535161

JO - EUR J TRAUMA EMERG S

JF - EUR J TRAUMA EMERG S

SN - 1863-9933

ER -