Bacterial Organisms Colonizing Mohs Surgical Wounds Healing by Second Intention on the Lower Extremities: A Prospective, Controlled Study

Author:

Renzi Michael A.1,Jennings Tara2,Lawrence Naomi2,Decker Ashley2

Affiliation:

1. Dermatology Consultants, Lexington, Kentucky;

2. Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, Camden, New Jersey

Abstract

BACKGROUND Based on recent research, second intention wounds may be at greater risk for postoperative infection compared with sutured wounds. Accurate diagnosis of postoperative wound infections on the lower leg can be challenging and result in unnecessary antibiotic administration. OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to identify bacterial organisms that commonly colonize second intention surgical wounds after Mohs micrographic surgery (MMS) and isolate pathogenic organisms. METHODS Patients with second intention surgical wounds on the lower leg were evaluated 2 weeks after MMS. Wounds were swabbed for bacteria and categorized as infected or not infected based on clinical appearance. Any colonizing bacteria were recorded once the culture results were reported. RESULTS Twenty-five clinically infected wounds and 26 control wounds were cultured. Staphylococcus aureus was the most common bacteria, colonizing 8 infected wounds (15.7%) and 5 control wounds (9.8%). Eight cultures (32%) from clinically infected wounds grew normal skin flora alone. CONCLUSION Staphylococcus aureus is the most common bacteria colonizing wounds healing by second intention on the lower extremity. Thirty-two percent of clinically infected wounds grew normal skin flora, demonstrating the challenge of accurately diagnosing infection in lower extremity second intention wounds.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Dermatology,General Medicine,Surgery

Reference13 articles.

1. Identifying and defining complications of dermatologic surgery to be tracked in the American College of Mohs Surgery (ACMS) Registry;Council;J Am Acad Dermatol,2016

2. Incidence of infection after Mohs micrographic and dermatologic surgery before and after implementation of new sterilization guidelines;Liu;J Am Acad Dermatol,2014

3. Postoperative wound infection rates in dermatologic surgery;Futoryan;Dermatol Surg,1995

4. Oral antibiotics versus topical decolonization to prevent surgical site infection after Mohs micrographic surgery: a randomized, controlled trial;Cherian;Dermatol Surg,2013

5. Incidence of surgical site infections in second intention healing after dermatologic surgery;Schimmel;Dermatol Surg,2020

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