Superinfections of the Spine: A Single-Institution Experience
Anthony K. Chiu, Bibhas Amatya, Idris Amin, Amit S. Ratanpal, Alexandra Baker Lutz, Brian M. Shear, Ivan B. Ye, Robin Fencel, Louis J. Bivona, Eugene Y. Koh, Julio J. Jauregui, Steven C. Ludwig, Daniel L. Cavanaugh

TL;DR
This study examines spine superinfections, finding they occur in 7% of cases and are linked to specific patient risk factors and organisms.
Contribution
The paper provides a single-institution analysis of spine superinfections and identifies associated patient characteristics and organisms.
Findings
Superinfections occurred in 7% of initial I&Ds and accounted for 25% of repeat I&Ds.
Patients with superinfections had lower preoperative ESR and CRP levels compared to controls.
Common superinfecting organisms included Candida, Pseudomonas, and Staphylococcus species.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: A superinfection occurs when a new, secondary organism colonizes an existing infection. Spine infections are associated with high patient morbidity and sometimes require multiple irrigations and debridements (I&Ds). When multiple I&Ds are required, the risk of complications increases. The purpose of this study was to report our experience with spine superinfections and determine which patients are typically affected. Methods: A retrospective case series of spine superinfections and a retrospective case–control analysis were conducted. Data were collected manually from electronic medical records. Spine I&Ds were identified. Groups were created for patients who had multiple I&Ds for (1) a recurrence of the same causative organism or (2) a superinfection with a novel organism. Preoperative demographic, clinical, and microbiologic data were compared between these two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfectious Diseases and Tuberculosis · Orthopedic Infections and Treatments · Hematological disorders and diagnostics
