The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy, in preventing Spinal Surgical Infection, of intraoperative pulsatile irrigation with a 2000-ml saline solution of PVP-Iodine in a group of patients undergoing complex spine surgery with a posterior approach. To confirm and better assess the efficacy of intraoperative irrigation on the infection rate in spinal surgery, specimens for bacterial culture were harvested by swabs from muscular tissue before and after irrigation of the wounds
The investigators enrolled fifty patients undergoing spinal surgery were randomly divided in two subgroups (A and B) of 25 patients each. In subgroup A, wounds were irrigated with dilute (3%) povidone-iodine solution through a low-pressure pulsatile device. In subgroup B wounds were irrigated with normal saline solution thorough a bulb syringe. In both subgroup specimens for bacterial culture were harvested by swabs from surgical site before and after irrigation of the wounds.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
50
Number of Participants With surgical site infection
Comparison of the results obtained from microbiological bacterial cultures of samples harvested during complex spine surgery in two groups of patients treated intraoperatively with pulsatile irrigation with diluted PVP-I (group A) or pulsatile irrigation with saline solution (group B)
Time frame: From the surgery to 1 year after
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