Use of antimicrobials in the management of open fractures
R. B. Gustilo
The role of antibiotic therapy in open fractures is secondary to adequate
debridement, irrigation, and definitive wound care. Experimental and
clinical studies indicate that parenteral administration of appropriate
antibiotics within three hours after injury helps to prevent wound sepsis.
Intial wound cultures of 158 open fracture wounds revealed bacterial growth
in 70.3%. Eighty-six were Gram-positive, 57 were Gram-negative, and 32
yielded mixed bacterial growth. Sensitivity studies of these organisms
suggest that cephalothin sodium is the most effective antibiotic for
prophylaxis. In a prospective study from 1969 to 1975, treatment of 520
patients was as follows: debridement, copious irrigation, and primary
closure for types 1 and 2 fractures and secondary closure for type 3
fractures. No primary internal fixation was done except in vascular
injuries. Cultures were taken of all wounds and antibiotics were given
before surgery and for three days postoperatively. In type 3 open
fractures, severe soft tissue injury, and segmental or traumatic
amputation, the infection rate was 9%, compared to a 44% infection rate in
the retrospective study from 1955 to 1968.