Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Surgical site infections after mouth tumor surgery in dogs
By Rigby, Brittney E et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2021·Department of Surgical Science, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Incidence and Risk Factors for Surgical Site Infections Following Oromaxillofacial Oncologic Surgery in Dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 226 dogs that had surgery for mouth and jaw tumors were studied to see how often they developed infections at the surgery site. The researchers found that about 7.5% of these dogs got infections, and longer surgeries (over 6 hours) were linked to a higher risk of infection. Interestingly, using antibiotics before surgery didn't seem to help prevent infections, which challenges the common practice of giving them for these types of procedures. The findings suggest that for longer surgeries, it might be a good idea to use antibiotics, but they may not be necessary for all cases.
People also search for: dog surgery infection risk · mouth tumor surgery dog · antibiotics for dog surgery
Abstract
Antibiotic stewardship in veterinary medicine is essential to help prevent resistant bacterial infections. Critical evaluation into the benefits of prophylactic use of antibiotics during veterinary surgical procedures is under reported and additional investigation is warranted. The objectives of this paper were to determine the incidence of surgical site infection in dogs that underwent oromaxillofacial oncologic surgery and to identify risk factors for the development of surgical site infection. In this retrospective cohort study including 226 dogs surgically treated for oromaxillofacial tumors between January 1, 1997 and December 31, 2018, the incidence of surgical site infection was determined to be 7.5%. Univariable logistical regression models were used to evaluate potential risk factors for development of surgical site infections including signalment, tumor type, antibiotic protocol, time under anesthesia, location of surgical procedure (dental suite vs. sterile operating room), specific comorbidities, and surgical margins obtained. Anesthetic events lasting greater than 6 h were significantly associated with development of infection. Signalment, comorbidities, administration of anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive medications, tumor type, histological margin evaluation, surgical procedure location, and antibiotic protocols were not significant contributors to development of infection. Use of antibiotic therapy in this cohort was not protective against development of infection and may not be routinely indicated for all oromaxillofacial oncologic surgeries despite common promotion of its use and the contaminated nature of the oral cavity. Anesthetic time significantly contributed towards the development of infection and use of perioperative antibiotics for surgical procedures lasting >6 h may be routinely warranted.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34733910/