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Antibiotic prophylaxis in endoscopic endonasal pituitary and skull base surgery

Authors :
Carmelo Lucio Sturiale
Paolo Farneti
Laura Milanese
Matteo Zoli
Giorgio Frank
Ernesto Pasquini
Giacomo Sollini
Corrado Zenesini
Diego Mazzatenta
Chiara Martone
Milanese, Laura
Zoli, Matteo
Sollini, Giacomo
Martone, Chiara
Zenesini, Corrado
Sturiale, Carmelo
Farneti, Paolo
Frank, Giorgio
Pasquini, Ernesto
Mazzatenta, Diego
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Objective: Postoperative infection is a potentially dramatic consequence in endoscopic endonasal surgery. The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of our intraoperative antibiotic prophylaxis, analyzing the risk factors of postoperative meningitis in our series. Methods: Each endoscopic endonasal procedure performed since 1998 in patients with no preoperative infections and a follow-up longer than 30 days have been included and retrospectively reviewed. Antibiotic protocol consisted in single antibiotic administration of ampicillin/sulbactam 3 g or cefazolin 2 g on induction, no postoperative administrations have been performed after 2005. All cases of CSF leak, meningitis, and systemic infection were recorded. Results: Two thousand thirty-two procedures matched the inclusion criteria (median age 50; range: 1-89, male/female ratio: 1:1.12). Intraoperative CSF leak occurred in 32.8% of the cases and postoperative CSF leak in 3.4%. The rate of meningitis was 0.69%, other systemic infections were observed in 0.44% of cases. Meningitis was statistically associated with intra- and postoperative CSF leak (p

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1ac82f9fa3bc05808bf278a4558f99de