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Published in: Pediatric Surgery International 9/2018

01-09-2018 | Original Article

Impact of relationship between the stoma site and the primary incision on occurrence of laparotomy wound infection in contaminated or dirty wound operations in neonates

Authors: Mikihiro Inoue, Keiichi Uchida, Yuka Nagano, Kohei Matsushita, Yuhki Koike, Kohei Otake, Yoshiki Okita, Yuji Toiyama, Toshimitsu Araki, Masato Kusunoki

Published in: Pediatric Surgery International | Issue 9/2018

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Abstract

Background

In neonatal surgical patients requiring an enterostomy, there is no definitive recommendation regarding the ideal enterostomy location: at the edge of the primary incision or at a different incision.

Methods

We retrospectively reviewed 2005–2017 administration data in our institution. All neonatal patients who underwent contaminated or dirty wound laparotomy and enterostomy construction were evaluated regarding the enterostomy location, occurrence of postoperative incisional surgical-site infection (SSI) at the primary incision, and stoma-related complications.

Results

Patients were divided into two groups based on stoma location: at the primary incision (the same incision group: SI group, n = 16) or at another incision (different incision group: DI group, n = 23). We performed 2 jejunostomies, 13 ileostomies, and 1 colostomy in the SI group, and 4 jejunostomies, 18 ileostomies, and 1 colostomy in the DI group. One of 16 patients (6.3%) in the SI group and 2/23 patients (8.7%) in the DI group experienced superficial incisional SSI, with comparable SSI incidence between groups (p = 0.78). Every SSI did not result in stoma-related complications.

Conclusions

Although the enterostomy location did not influence the incidence of laparotomy wound infection in this study, prospective studies are mandatory to fully assess the safety of enterostomy construction at the edge of the primary incision.
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Metadata
Title
Impact of relationship between the stoma site and the primary incision on occurrence of laparotomy wound infection in contaminated or dirty wound operations in neonates
Authors
Mikihiro Inoue
Keiichi Uchida
Yuka Nagano
Kohei Matsushita
Yuhki Koike
Kohei Otake
Yoshiki Okita
Yuji Toiyama
Toshimitsu Araki
Masato Kusunoki
Publication date
01-09-2018
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Pediatric Surgery International / Issue 9/2018
Print ISSN: 0179-0358
Electronic ISSN: 1437-9813
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00383-018-4310-9

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