Abstract
BackgroundOne of the major objectives for the management of open fractures is to prevent bone and soft tissue infection. Here, we identified species and drug sensitivities of bacterial isolates recovered during open fracture debridement and after infection and compared the results between the two time points. MethodsA total of 61 hospitalized patients with open fractures who developed post-operative wound infection between October 2016 and December 2017 were included in this study. The cohort included 43 males and 18 females aged between 4 and 72 years. Patients were admitted to hospital 1–14 h after injury. Samples were collected after debridement and after infection and submitted for bacterial culture. Resulting isolates were identified using a VITEK 2 Bacterial Identification System and tested for drug sensitivity using the disc diffusion method. Results from the two time points were then compared. ResultsThe positive bacterial culture rate following debridement was relatively low (14/61, 22.9%). In addition, bacteria cultured after debridement were generally inconsistent with those cultured after wound infection, with a concordance rate of only 3.3% (2/61). Gram-negative bacteria accounted for 91.3% (63/69) of isolates recovered from wound infections following surgery, among which Acinetobacter baumannii was baumannii was the predominant pathogen, accounting for 49.3% (42/69) of all isolates. Overall, 60.8% (42/69) of postoperative infections were caused by multi-drug resistant bacteria, with A. baumannii isolates accounting for 80.9% (34/42) of these cases. Rates of cefoperazone/sulbactam resistance were relatively low among the isolates (15/34, 44.1%), and most isolates showed a sensitive or intermediate resistance phenotype. ConclusionsResults of bacterial culture after debridement could not predict pathogenic bacteria causing postoperative infection. Therefore, we propose that open fracture infections are predominantly nosocomial and are mainly caused by multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacteria. Further attention should be paid to the control of these pathogens in clinical settings.
Published Version
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