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Orthopedics

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Orthopaedics

Environmental determinants

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Operative Environment, Pouya Alijanipour Md, Joseph Karam Md, Adolfo Llinas Md, Kelly G. Vince Md, Charalampos Zalavras Md, Matthew Austin Md, Grant Garrigues Md, Snir Heller Md, James Huddleston Md, Brian Klatt Md, Viktor Krebs Md, Christoph Lohmann Md, Edward J. Mcpherson Md, Robert Molloy Md, Ali Oliashirazi Md, Mitchell Schwaber Md, Eoin Sheehan Md, Eric Smith Md, Robert Sterling Md, Gregory Stocks Md, Shrinand Vaidya Md Jan 2014

Operative Environment, Pouya Alijanipour Md, Joseph Karam Md, Adolfo Llinas Md, Kelly G. Vince Md, Charalampos Zalavras Md, Matthew Austin Md, Grant Garrigues Md, Snir Heller Md, James Huddleston Md, Brian Klatt Md, Viktor Krebs Md, Christoph Lohmann Md, Edward J. Mcpherson Md, Robert Molloy Md, Ali Oliashirazi Md, Mitchell Schwaber Md, Eoin Sheehan Md, Eric Smith Md, Robert Sterling Md, Gregory Stocks Md, Shrinand Vaidya Md

Orthopaedics

Postoperative SSIs are believed to occur via bacterial inoculation at the time of surgery or as a result of bacterial contamination of the wound via open pathways to the deep tissue layers.1–3 The probability of SSI is reflected by interaction of parameters that can be categorized into three major groups.2 The first group consists of factors related to the ability of bacteria to cause infection and include initial inoculation load and genetically determined virulence factors that are required for adherence, reproduction, toxin production, and bypassing host defense mechanisms. The second group involves those factors related to the defense …