Risk Factors For Groin Wound Infection After Femoral Artery Catheterization: A Case-Control Study

Philip M. Polgreen,Daniel J. Diekema,Jeff VandeBerg,R. Todd Wiblin,Yi Yi Chen, Sherry David, Dianne Rasmus, Nicole Gerdts, Angelena Ross, Louis Katz,Loreen A. Herwaldt

INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY(2006)

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摘要
Objective. Groin wound infection (GWI) after femoral artery catheterization is unusual. However, several reports of GWI associated with the use of a Perclose device appear in the surgical literature.Design. A case-control study.Setting. We pooled 23 cases and 83 controls from a university hospital and a community medical center.Patients. A case was defined as a patient who developed a GWI after a femoral artery catheterization. At the university hospital, 3 controls were randomly selected from the at-risk population and matched to each case by time of procedure only (within 2 weeks). At the community medical center, 4 controls were selected and matched to each case by time of procedure (within 2 weeks), sex, and age (within 5 years).Results. We considered several covariates, including age, sex, body mass index, medical conditions, Perclose use, hematoma formation, and antithrombotic therapy. In a multivariate model, only hematoma formation (odds ratio, 68.8; 95% confidence interval, 12.1-391.4) and glycoprotein IIb/IIIa platelet inhibitor therapy (odds ratio, 6.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-33.6) were statistically significant predictors of GWI; Perclose use (odds ratio, 0.9; 95% confidence interval, 0.2-3.7) was not a statistically significant predictor of GWI. However, most of the hematomas (15/17) formed after procedures during which a Perclose device was used.Conclusion. Perclose use did not have any additional effect on GWI risk beyond the effect that hematoma formation had.
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关键词
risk factors,case control study
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