Surgical site infections were defined as infections that developed in the area of an operation within 30 days after surgery. They remained a common problem after surgery and could increase pain, delay wound healing, prolong hospital stay, increase treatment costs, and raise the risk of further complications. Although systemic antibiotics were routinely used before surgery to reduce this risk, it was not yet clear whether adding a local antibiotic directly into the wound provided better protection than systemic antibiotics alone. This randomized controlled trial was planned to compare two methods of antibiotic prophylaxis in adult patients undergoing clean or clean-contaminated elective surgery at Surgical Unit I, Lahore General Hospital, Lahore. One group received the standard prophylactic systemic antibiotic cefazolin intravenously before surgery. The other group received the same systemic antibiotic together with local gentamicin applied into the surgical wound during the operation. The purpose of the study was to determine whether the combined use of local and systemic antibiotics reduced the frequency of surgical site infection more effectively than systemic antibiotic prophylaxis alone. The study included adult patients of either gender who were able to provide informed consent and were undergoing elective procedures such as hernia repair or laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Patients with allergy to cefazolin or gentamicin, prolonged prior antibiotic use, diabetes mellitus, previous surgical site infection, immunocompromised state, coronary artery disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or chronic kidney disease were excluded. Participants were followed during hospital stay and were then monitored for 30 days after surgery for evidence of wound infection. Surgical site infection was assessed using the Southampton wound scoring system, and any grade other than grade 0 was considered infection according to the study definition.
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Frequency of Surgical Site Infection
Timeframe: Within 30 days after surgery