The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and complication profile of local vancomycin application in primary arthroplasty. The investigators hypothesized that the use of local antibiotics would decrease the rate of infection compared to controls and this will be achieved by applying 1 gm of vancomycin powder intracapsularly.
Periprosthetic joint infection is a truly devastating complication of total joint arthroplasty (TJA), causing most patients to undergo a revision surgery and to bear significant psychological and financial burden. Surveys suggest patients of total joint arthroplasty undergoing revision for infection have poorer functional outcomes and satisfaction levels than patients undergoing revision for other reasons, with negative consequences being more persistent . Despite developments in infection prophylaxis and risk factor mitigation, patients with periprosthetic joint infection represent a substantial societal and monetary cost to our value-based health care system. Thus, there is significant interest in developing and systematically evaluating new PJI prophylaxis measures to reduce this rate. Historically, local wound vancomycin powder has been shown to safely reduce infection rates in spine surgery. The earliest and strongest support for local vancomycin powder for primary orthopedic surgery came from the spine literature, and it now has support in the shoulder and elbow and foot and ankle literature. The use of topical vancomycin was first reported in 1989 when the application of topical vancomycin to the sternum in cardio thoracic patients reduced rates of sternal infection from 3.6% to 0.45%). Similarly, multiple studies have shown that vancomycin decreases the rate of postoperative infections in patients undergoing spinal surgery. Importantly, data on topical vancomycin powder used alone remain inconclusive for TJA, with some stating that it may increase aseptic wound complications, and others stating that it reduces PJI significantly .
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
174
applying 1 gm of vancomycin powder intracapsularly during primary total knee and hip arthroplasty to prevent periprosthetic joint infection
Primary total knee or total hip arthroplasty without using local vancomycin
Follow up for infected patients after 90 days with surgical site infection.
The purpose of this study is evaluation of the efficacy and complication profile of local vancomycin application in primary arthroplasty. The use of local antibiotics would decrease the rate of infection compared to controls and this will be achieved by applying 1 gm of vancomycin powder intracapsularly that will be evaluated by inflammatory markers CRP (if more than 1 gm/dl), ESR(more than 20) as laboratory investigations.
Time frame: 3 months after operation
Aseptic wound complications such as skin erosion, wound dehiscence, and prolonged wound healing.
The purpose of this study is evaluation of the efficacy and complication profile of local vancomycin application in primary arthroplasty. The investigators hypothesized that the use of local antibiotics would decrease the rate of infection compared to controls and this will be achieved by applying 1 gm of vancomycin powder intracapsularly by examination wound site if there's surgical site infection, dehescience, abscess, discharge.
Time frame: 3 months
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