Role of Oral Veillonella Species in Predicting Surgical Site Infections After Maxillofacial Trauma: A Prospective Observational Study
Mahima Seetaram, Vivek N, Abinaya Subramanian, Anusha Gopinathan, Leela KV, Saravanan Chandran, Magesh K T, Karthik Ramakrishnan

TL;DR
This study explores how Veillonella bacteria in the mouth may predict surgical site infections after maxillofacial trauma, aiming to improve hospital care and prevent infections.
Contribution
The study introduces Veillonella colony count as a potential predictor for surgical site infections in maxillofacial trauma patients.
Findings
Veillonella colony counts were higher in patients with surgical site infections compared to those without.
Early surgical intervention correlated with lower Veillonella colony counts on admission and discharge.
Veillonella counts showed modified relations with other oral commensals depending on surgical timing.
Abstract
Introduction: There are comparatively fewer surgical site infections after craniofacial trauma than after trauma to the extremities, and the etiology is complex. Gram-negative facultative anaerobic bacteria Veillonella is a common commensal in the oral cavity and has been linked to osteomyelitis and surgical site infections in prosthetic joint infections. They serve as early biological indicators. Aims/objectives: This study aims to assess the presence of Veillonella in patients presenting with maxillofacial trauma, to document the difference in colony count in patients requiring surgical intervention at different time intervals as against patients with surgical site infections, and to provide better hospital care and management so as to improve the standard of care with an attempt to prevent the possibility of postoperative surgical site infections. Methodology: In this study,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthopedic Infections and Treatments · Oral microbiology and periodontitis research · Dental Research and COVID-19
