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- Peter Steffen, Wulf Seeling, Andreas Essig, Erika Stiepan, and Michael Georg Rockemann.
- Department of Anesthesiology, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany. peter.steffen@medizin.uni-ulm.de
- J Clin Anesth. 2004 Mar 1;16(2):92-7.
Study ObjectiveTo investigate the frequency of bacterial colonization of epidural catheters used for postoperative pain treatment longer than 24 hours in abdominal, thoracic, or trauma surgery patients.DesignRetrospective study.SettingIntermediate care facility and general ward of a university hospital.Patients502 patients who received epidural catheters after abdominal, thoracic, or vascular surgery at our institution from January 1996 to December 2000.InterventionsPlacement of an epidural catheter, which was used for postoperative pain treatment, for more than 24 hours. The puncture site dressing included saturation each day with povidone-iodine.Measurements And Main ResultsMicrobiologic monitoring of epidural catheter tips and daily examination of puncture sites with regard to signs of inflammation took place. Four times daily patients were examined to check adequacy of pain treatment and neurologic deficits. Catheter tip cultures were positive in 29 patients (5.8%). Staphylococcus epidermidis was isolated in 22 cases (76%). No case of spinal epidural abscess was observed within 6 months after epidural catheterization. The average catheterization time was 5 days (quartile range: 4 to 6 days).ConclusionsMeticulous management ensures a relatively low level of bacterial contamination in epidural catheters applied for postoperative pain treatment greater than 5 days. Contamination rarely leads to spinal epidural infection.
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