Prophylactic surgical wound management with negative pressure therapy in emergency abdominal surgery: is it really useful?

Manejo profiláctico de herida quirúrgica con terapia por presión negativa en cirugía abdominal de emergencia: ¿realmente es útil?

Authors

  • Yelson Alejandro Picón Jaimes Programa de Doctorado en Salud, Bienestar y Bioética, Universidad Ramón Llul. Barcelona, España. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7498-5346
  • Samir Alberto Caycedo Assia Facultad de Medicina, Universidad del Sinú. Cartagena, Colombia.
  • Isabela Zenilma Daza Patiño Facultad de Medicina, Universidad del Sinú. Cartagena, Colombia. https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3240-1450
  • Eliecer Enrique Aragon Acosta Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Libre. Barranquilla, Colombia
  • Cindy Stephanie Buitrago Almanza Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Nacional de Colombia. Bogotá, Colombia. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8813-8861

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25176/RFMH.v23i1.5291

Keywords:

terapia por presión negativa, Cirugía, Laparotomía, Emergencia, Profilaxis

Abstract

Mr Editor

Infection at the operating site (ISO) is the most common postoperative surgical complication in general surgery. This is more frequent in cases of emergency interventions, compromises the patient's prognosis, causes high health costs, and signicantly increases the risk of reintervention. Negative pressure therapy (NPT) is an innovative strategy that was proposed about two decades ago, and has been gradually replicated around the world. This means that there are still many gaps in the evidence when it is used in many diseases and under different contexts. Nevertheless, it allows obtaining conclusive results in the time of healing, reduction of complications (mainly dehiscence and ISO), decrease in hospital stay, among other factors. In Latin America, there is very little evidence on the use of this strategy, and it is null regarding its use in emergency cases without being able to determine its impact on our environment. Recently, Lakhani et al 3 conducted a meta-analysis of 7 studies with a total of 1199 patients, where they evaluated the ISO rate in patients undergoing emergency laparotomy in whom NPT was used (n=566) vs. control group (standard care, n=633). The NPT group had a lower infection rate (13.6% vs. 25.1%), with a 57-percentage point reduction in the probability of presenting ISO (OR 0.43; 95% CI: 0.30 - 0.62).

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References

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Norman G, Shi C, Goh EL, Murphy EMA, Reid A, Chiverton L, et al. Negative pressure wound therapy for surgical wounds healing by primary closure. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2022; 4:CD009261. Disponible en: https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD009261.pub7

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Published

2023-01-31

How to Cite

Picón Jaimes, Y. A., Caycedo Assia, S. A. ., Daza Patiño, I. Z. ., Aragon Acosta, E. E. ., & Buitrago Almanza, C. S. . (2023). Prophylactic surgical wound management with negative pressure therapy in emergency abdominal surgery: is it really useful? Manejo profiláctico de herida quirúrgica con terapia por presión negativa en cirugía abdominal de emergencia: ¿realmente es útil?. Revista De La Facultad De Medicina Humana, 23(1). https://doi.org/10.25176/RFMH.v23i1.5291