INFECTIOUS COMPLICATIONS IN MAJOR ORTHOPEDIC SURGERIES

Authors

  • Lillian Torres Soares Pessoa Faculdade de Medicina Nova Esperança
  • Bruna Ghiraldi Machado Faculdade ZARNS
  • Renato Nishigaki Sericaku Centro Universitário Alfredo Nasser
  • Sergio Adrian Barreto Roman Universidad del Pacífico
  • Rangel Silva Martins de Queiroz Universidade Nove de Julho
  • Marilia Emanuele Modesto Alves Universidade Federal de Sergipe
  • Gabriela Gonçalves da Cunha Lima Faculdade de Medicina Nova Esperança
  • Karine Gomes Lima Universidade Federal da Bahia
  • Thiago Bousquet Barcellos Uniredentor
  • Guilherme Lima dos Santos Universidade Nove de Julho

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v11i9.21217

Keywords:

Orthopedic Surgery. Surgical Site Infection. Postoperative Complications.

Abstract

Major orthopedic surgeries, such as arthroplasties, complex fixations, and reconstructive procedures, represent highly complex and clinically impactful interventions. Despite technological advances and the implementation of infection control protocols, infectious complications remain a major challenge in this context, contributing to increased morbidity and mortality, prolonged hospital stays, the need for reoperations, and increased healthcare costs. This narrative review aimed to analyze the incidence, risk factors, etiological agents, and prevention and treatment strategies for infectious complications in major orthopedic surgeries. Surgical site and implant-associated infections, often related to biofilm formation, were found to be the most prevalent events, with a notable presence of Staphylococcus aureus and coagulase-negative staphylococci, in addition to an increase in the occurrence of multidrug-resistant Gram-negative bacilli. The main risk factors include chronic comorbidities, prolonged surgical time, and failures in antimicrobial prophylaxis protocols. Management strategies include targeted antibiotic therapy, revision surgical procedures, and, in severe cases, implant removal. It is concluded that prevention, based on standardized measures and strengthened epidemiological surveillance, constitutes the most effective approach to reducing the occurrence of these complications and improving clinical outcomes in patients undergoing major orthopedic procedures.

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Author Biographies

Lillian Torres Soares Pessoa, Faculdade de Medicina Nova Esperança

Faculdade de Medicina Nova Esperança.

Bruna Ghiraldi Machado, Faculdade ZARNS

Faculdade ZARNS.

Renato Nishigaki Sericaku, Centro Universitário Alfredo Nasser

Centro Universitário Alfredo Nasser.

Sergio Adrian Barreto Roman, Universidad del Pacífico

Universidad del Pacífico sede Pedro Juan Caballero.

Rangel Silva Martins de Queiroz, Universidade Nove de Julho

Universidade Nove de Julho.

Marilia Emanuele Modesto Alves, Universidade Federal de Sergipe

Universidade Federal de Sergipe.

Gabriela Gonçalves da Cunha Lima, Faculdade de Medicina Nova Esperança

Faculdade de Medicina Nova Esperança.

Karine Gomes Lima, Universidade Federal da Bahia

Universidade Federal da Bahia.

Thiago Bousquet Barcellos, Uniredentor

Uniredentor.

Guilherme Lima dos Santos, Universidade Nove de Julho

Universidade Nove de Julho.

Published

2025-09-24

How to Cite

Pessoa, L. T. S., Machado, B. G., Sericaku, R. N., Roman, S. A. B., Queiroz, R. S. M. de, Alves, M. E. M., … Santos, G. L. dos. (2025). INFECTIOUS COMPLICATIONS IN MAJOR ORTHOPEDIC SURGERIES. Revista Ibero-Americana De Humanidades, Ciências E Educação, 11(9), 3206–3214. https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v11i9.21217