Wound infections in renal transplant wounds: pathogenetic and prognostic factors
Date
1975Author
Kyriakides, George K.Simmons, R. L.
Najarian, J. S.
Source
Annals of SurgeryVolume
182Issue
6Pages
770-775Google Scholar check
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The factors contributing to transplant wound infection, as well as those determining its outcome, were reviewed in 27 transplant patients with wound infection. Unrelated cadaver kidneys, diabetes, urinary fistulas and wound hematomas are all factors predisposing to wound infection. Overall incidence of wound infection in this series was 6.1% (27/439). When infections secondary to known preventable causes (i.e. hematomas and fistulas) were excluded, the incidence of wound infection was only 1.6%. Furthermore, if diabetics and retransplanted patients were excluded, the incidence of wound infection in non diabetic patients who had their first transplant was only 0.7%. Perinephric infections are much more serious and carry a worse prognosis than superficial infections. Overall mortality of wound infections was 30% (8/27), most deaths being caused by sepsis from deep infection. Only in 3 patients (11%) did the wounds heal, and could the kidneys be saved, whereas the rest of the survivors (15/18) had healed wounds but lost their kidneys. It is emphasized that prevention of hematomas and urinary fistulas is the most important measure in the prevention of transplant wound infection.