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Not a Routine Case, Why Expect the Routine Outcome? Quantifying the Infectious Burden of Emergency General Surgery Using the NSQIP

Authors :
Michael R, Arnold
Angela M, Kao
Kyle W, Cunningham
A Britton, Christmas
Bradley W, Thomas
Ronald F, Sing
Caroline E, Reinke
Samuel W, Ross
Source :
The American surgeon. 85(9)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Emergent surgeries have different causes and physiologic patient responses than the same elective surgery, many of which are due to infectious etiologies. Therefore, we hypothesized that emergency cases have a higher risk of postoperative SSI than their elective counterparts. The ACS NSQIP database was queried from 2005 to 2016 for all cholecystectomies, ventral hernia repairs, and partial colectomies to examine common emergency and elective general surgery operations. Thirty-day outcomes were compared by emergent status. Any SSI was the primary outcome. There were 863,164 surgeries: 416,497 cholecystectomies, 220,815 ventral hernia repairs, and 225,852 partial colectomies. SSIs developed in 38,865 (4.5%) patients. SSIs increased with emergencies (5.3%

Details

ISSN :
15559823
Volume :
85
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American surgeon
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........b0513e40aa12b5a5de26623f0c7e2599