Antimicrobial prophylaxis has an important role in reducing surgical wound infection rates. Besides prophylaxis; basic infection control mechanisms implemented in the clinic (17), the surgeon's experience and technique, duration of operation, hospital and operating room conditions, instrumentation, preoperative preparation including body-washing, skin antisepsis and shaving, peri-operative management of temperature and blood glucose regulation, and the patient's existing co-morbidities all play an important role (16,18). Patient-related risk factors for surgical wound infections are advanced age, negative nutritional status, obesity, diabetes mellitus, cigarette smoking, presence of infection, immunodeficiency or immunosuppressive use, steroid use, recent surgery, long preoperative hospitalization and colonization with microorganisms.
MicroorganismsIn breast and plastic surgery procedures, usually S. aureus is responsible for the wound infection (2,6,7,10,11,15,19,20). In axillary region procedures, obese patients prone to maceration, procedures at sweating areas P. aeruginosa, Serratia marcescens, Enterobacteriaceae including E. coli and gram-negatives like Klebsiella can be isolated (20, 21). . Pages 582-667 of this book contain the section:"Therapeutic Guidelines on Antimicrobial Prophylaxis in Surgery". This section includes current clinical developments, evidence and recommendations on the application of standard and effective antimicrobial prophylaxis in adult and pediatric patients, and has significant differences compared to the previous 1999 edition. On pages 632-633, antimicrobial prophylaxis in breast and plastic surgery practice is addressed in detail. This article contains a summary of the recommendations made in ASHP 2012/2013 Report regarding the antimicrobial prophylaxis in breast and plastic surgery applications.