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SCIP-INF-2: Prophylactic antibiotic selection for surgical patients (added 2007) SCIP-INF-3: Prophylactic antibiotics discontinued within 24 h after surgery end time (48 h for cardiac patients) SCIP-INF-4: Cardiac surgery patients with controlled 6 A.M. postoperative serum glucose management (≤200 mg/dL) (added 2008)
An extended course of antibiotics is required in PJIs, usually 6–12 weeks of antibiotic therapy. [2] [4] Intravenous antibiotics are initially used and then transitioned to oral antibiotics. A strategy of surgical debridement to decrease the bacterial load prior to starting systemic antibiotics is sometimes employed. [4]
[citation needed] Mupirocin is a topical antibiotic commonly used for superficial skin infections and has been approved by the FDA nasal decolonization. [7] [8] Though these are the most commonly used products, there are a number of alternative antibiotics and antiseptics, like povidone-iodine, that are used in decolonization. [citation needed]
Alternatives to knee replacement surgery. A doctor may recommend alternatives to surgery for knee issues. Part B currently covers the following options if a doctor confirms they are medically ...
For prophylaxis in surgery, only antibiotics with good tolerability should be used. Cephalosporins remain the preferred drugs for perioperative prophylaxis due to their low toxicity . Parenteral systemic antibiotics seem to be more appropriate than oral or topical antibiotics because the chosen antibiotics must reach high concentrations at all ...
Advances in medicine and surgery have led to increasing reliance on a variety of medical devices of which the catheter is the most widely used. Unfortunately, the non-shedding surfaces of catheters can be colonized by microbes resulting in biofilm formation and, consequently, lead to an infection. Such catheter-related infections are a major ...
Phage therapy is the use of bacteriophages to treat bacterial infections. Bacteriophage treatment offers a possible alternative to conventional antibiotic treatments for bacterial infection. [55]
Diguanides including chlorhexidine gluconate, a bacteriocidal antiseptic which (with an alcoholic solvent) is considered a safe and effective antiseptic for reducing the risk of infection after clean surgery, [11] including tourniquet-controlled upper limb surgery. [12] It is also used in mouthwashes to treat inflammation of the gums .