Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part II: Response of the
Body to Wounding: Chapter XI: Infection
Etiologic Factors
United States Department of Defense
Peer Review Status: Internally Peer
Reviewed
The development of a wound Infection is associated with one or
more of the following factors:
- Delay in surgical treatment.
- Inadequate wound debridement.
- Associated vascular injury resulting in regional tissue
ischemia.
- Inadequate hemostasis at the initial wound operation,
resulting in subsequent hematoma formation.
- Retention of foreign bodies within the wound.
- Failure to provide adequate drainage.
- Tight packing of the wound or the use of tight circular
dressings or casts.
- Primary closure of war wounds.
- Failure to recognize and treat a perforated hollow
viscus.
- Wound contamination with bacteria that are resistant to
antibiotics.
- Seecondary contamination from fomites or exposure to personnel
who are carriers of pyogenic bacteria.
- Presence of metabolic diseases, such as diabetes, which
predispose to the development and spread of infection.
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