医学
重症监护医学
围手术期
抗生素
心理干预
感染控制
外科
护理部
微生物学
生物
作者
T. Fintan Moriarty,Willem‐Jan Metsemakers,Mario Morgenstern,Marloes I. Hofstee,Alejandro Vallejo Diaz,James E. Cassat,Britt Wildemann,Melissa Depypere,Edward M. Schwarz,R. Geoff Richards
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41572-022-00396-0
摘要
Musculoskeletal trauma leading to broken and damaged bones and soft tissues can be a life-threating event. Modern orthopaedic trauma surgery, combined with innovation in medical devices, allows many severe injuries to be rapidly repaired and to eventually heal. Unfortunately, one of the persisting complications is fracture-related infection (FRI). In these cases, pathogenic bacteria enter the wound and divert the host responses from a bone-healing course to an inflammatory and antibacterial course that can prevent the bone from healing. FRI can lead to permanent disability, or long courses of therapy lasting from months to years. In the past 5 years, international consensus on a definition of these infections has focused greater attention on FRI, and new guidelines are available for prevention, diagnosis and treatment. Further improvements in understanding the role of perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis and the optimal treatment approach would be transformative for the field. Basic science and engineering innovations will be required to reduce infection rates, with interventions such as more efficient delivery of antibiotics, new antimicrobials, and optimizing host defences among the most likely to improve the care of patients with FRI. Fracture-related infection, involving infiltration of pathogenic bacteria into a wound that delays bone healing, is a common complication of bone fracture fixation. This Primer reviews the epidemiology, pathobiology, diagnosis and management of these infections and their impact on patient quality of life.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI