Influence of operating room surface contamination on surgical wounds: a prospective study
D. O. Weber, J. J. Gooch, W. R. Wood, E. M. Britt and R. O. Kraft
The influence of operating room contamination on wound infection rates in
clean, clean-contaminated, contaminated, and septid procedures was studied
by a prospective randomized study of 2,020 surgical wounds. Operating room
surface contamination was assessed by the RODAC bacterial plate method.
Control rooms uniformly received Wet-Vac cleaning between operations.
Experimental rooms were not cleaned between consecutive clean operations,
but were cleaned after contaminated operations. The difference in surface
contamination between groups of experimental and control rooms was found to
be significant at the P less than .05 level. Patients operated on in
experimental and control rooms were followed up postoperatively to assess
whether they experienced wound infection. No statistically significant
differences in wound infection rates were found between experimental and
control room operations as total groups, clean procedures, or operations of
long duration.