🔥 Burn Fat Fast. Discover How! 💪

Postoperative wound infections usually occur between the fifth | Surgery videos & books

Postoperative wound infections usually occur between the fifth and eighth postoperative days. Evidence of a wound infection within the first 24 hours after surgery should alert the physician to the possibility of necrotizing fasciitis. Necrotizing fasciitis is a lifethreatening infection most commonly caused by clostridial myositis and hemolytic streptococcus. In addition to spiking temperature, the patient may be septic with tachycardia, leukocytosis, and hemodynamic instability. On examination of the wound, crepitus (gas in the soft tissue) and a dishwater-appearing effluent may be apparent. Early diagnosis by opening the wound and sending a Gram’s stain is critical. The Gram’s stain will reveal a mixed flora of gramnegative rods and gram-positive cocci. Although broad-spectrum antibiotics are indicated, definitive treatment requires emergent aggressive debridement of the affected tissues. Hyperbaric oxygen treatment has no role in the acute management of necrotizing fasciitis. Diabetic patients are especially prone to necrotizing fasciitis. Fournier’s gangrene is a type of necrotizing fasciitis that affects the groin and perineum. The mortality rate can be as high as 75%.