Smoking, Smoking Cessation, and Wound Complications After Lumbar Spine Surgery
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Exhibit from the SRS 2002 Annual Meeting
1225 patients who had undergone lumbar surgery were retrospectively
studied. Smoking history and cessation prior to surgery
was recorded. The outcome measure of wound complication included:
wound infection, seroma or hematoma, breakdown
requiring wound care, and persistent drainage (greater than 7
days) requiring oral antibiotics. Stepwise logistic regression
analysis (correcting for confounding factors) demonstrated that
positive smoking history was a risk factor for wound infection.
The risk increased dramatically for patients who smoked 2 or more
packs per day. Patients who had ceased smoking for at
least 3 months were not at significantly higher risk for wound
complications than nonsmokers.
Updated on: 12/10/09
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