Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3048258273> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 85 of
85
with 100 items per page.
- W3048258273 endingPage "810" @default.
- W3048258273 startingPage "806" @default.
- W3048258273 abstract "BackgroundCutibacterium acnes is found in skin flora of the shoulder and is the most common microbe identified in periprosthetic shoulder infections. The purpose of this study is to determine if there is C acnes present on the incision scalpel in patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty despite extensive skin preparation techniques to prevent wound contamination.MethodsThe authors collected a consecutive case series of patients meeting inclusion criteria. Patients were included if they underwent either primary or revision shoulder arthroplasty at the tertiary care hospital with the senior author during the study period. Culture swab samples, testing for presence of C acnes, were collected from 17 consecutive patients who underwent shoulder arthroplasty with a single fellowship-trained surgeon between November 2019 and March 2020. Culture reports were recorded as “positive” or “negative” after 21 days. Institutional review board approval of the study protocol was obtained. The null hypothesis was that there would be no cases with knife blades “culture positive” for C acnes.Results17 patients were identified and fit inclusion criteria. There were 12 men (mean age 64.3 years, range 48-79 years) and 5 women (mean age 69.8 years, range 59-79 years). Two patients (11.8%) were found to have C acnes growth on the skin knife. Both patients were male and older than 70 years undergoing primary reverse shoulder arthroplasty with no history of previous shoulder infections.ConclusionThe presence of C acnes on the skin blade in 2 patients validates concerns that there is C acnes present in dermal tissue despite extensive attention to eradication of these microbes. There was a high rate of C acnes contamination on scalpel blades used for initial skin incisions and the authors conclude that there is value in discarding these blades from the surgical field. Cutibacterium acnes is found in skin flora of the shoulder and is the most common microbe identified in periprosthetic shoulder infections. The purpose of this study is to determine if there is C acnes present on the incision scalpel in patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty despite extensive skin preparation techniques to prevent wound contamination. The authors collected a consecutive case series of patients meeting inclusion criteria. Patients were included if they underwent either primary or revision shoulder arthroplasty at the tertiary care hospital with the senior author during the study period. Culture swab samples, testing for presence of C acnes, were collected from 17 consecutive patients who underwent shoulder arthroplasty with a single fellowship-trained surgeon between November 2019 and March 2020. Culture reports were recorded as “positive” or “negative” after 21 days. Institutional review board approval of the study protocol was obtained. The null hypothesis was that there would be no cases with knife blades “culture positive” for C acnes. 17 patients were identified and fit inclusion criteria. There were 12 men (mean age 64.3 years, range 48-79 years) and 5 women (mean age 69.8 years, range 59-79 years). Two patients (11.8%) were found to have C acnes growth on the skin knife. Both patients were male and older than 70 years undergoing primary reverse shoulder arthroplasty with no history of previous shoulder infections. The presence of C acnes on the skin blade in 2 patients validates concerns that there is C acnes present in dermal tissue despite extensive attention to eradication of these microbes. There was a high rate of C acnes contamination on scalpel blades used for initial skin incisions and the authors conclude that there is value in discarding these blades from the surgical field." @default.
- W3048258273 created "2020-08-13" @default.
- W3048258273 creator A5005268939 @default.
- W3048258273 creator A5015134833 @default.
- W3048258273 creator A5032913544 @default.
- W3048258273 creator A5048506248 @default.
- W3048258273 creator A5082006587 @default.
- W3048258273 date "2021-04-01" @default.
- W3048258273 modified "2023-10-09" @default.
- W3048258273 title "Is there value in the routine practice of discarding the incision scalpel from the surgical field to prevent deep wound contamination with Cutibacterium acnes?" @default.
- W3048258273 cites W1912444428 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W1969968936 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2048413587 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2063827511 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2094875297 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2139691349 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2160343267 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2296642749 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2309410168 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2328968049 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2506994600 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2770463800 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2787917023 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2789447290 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2798174362 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2799391653 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2806710026 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2807905687 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2808610706 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2904809476 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2909491098 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2912606487 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2939281491 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2947228400 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2952022727 @default.
- W3048258273 cites W2996577906 @default.
- W3048258273 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jse.2020.07.035" @default.
- W3048258273 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/7409834" @default.
- W3048258273 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32771608" @default.
- W3048258273 hasPublicationYear "2021" @default.
- W3048258273 type Work @default.
- W3048258273 sameAs 3048258273 @default.
- W3048258273 citedByCount "1" @default.
- W3048258273 countsByYear W30482582732021 @default.
- W3048258273 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3048258273 hasAuthorship W3048258273A5005268939 @default.
- W3048258273 hasAuthorship W3048258273A5015134833 @default.
- W3048258273 hasAuthorship W3048258273A5032913544 @default.
- W3048258273 hasAuthorship W3048258273A5048506248 @default.
- W3048258273 hasAuthorship W3048258273A5082006587 @default.
- W3048258273 hasBestOaLocation W30482582731 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConcept C141071460 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConcept C2776976047 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConcept C2778120723 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConcept C2778336525 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConceptScore W3048258273C141071460 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConceptScore W3048258273C2776976047 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConceptScore W3048258273C2778120723 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConceptScore W3048258273C2778336525 @default.
- W3048258273 hasConceptScore W3048258273C71924100 @default.
- W3048258273 hasFunder F4320309678 @default.
- W3048258273 hasFunder F4320310017 @default.
- W3048258273 hasIssue "4" @default.
- W3048258273 hasLocation W30482582731 @default.
- W3048258273 hasLocation W30482582732 @default.
- W3048258273 hasOpenAccess W3048258273 @default.
- W3048258273 hasPrimaryLocation W30482582731 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W1995515455 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W2066257651 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W2902005046 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W2959328181 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W3031052312 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W3032375762 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W3080095799 @default.
- W3048258273 hasRelatedWork W3217805664 @default.
- W3048258273 hasVolume "30" @default.
- W3048258273 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3048258273 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3048258273 magId "3048258273" @default.
- W3048258273 workType "article" @default.