Detection of Staph Colonization in Pre-op Arthroplasty Patients



Status:Completed
Conditions:Hospital
Therapuetic Areas:Other
Healthy:No
Age Range:19 - Any
Updated:3/16/2015
Start Date:September 2012
End Date:September 2015

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Enhanced Detection of Staphylococcus Aureus Colonization in Patients Undergoing Prosthetic Joint Implantation.

The presence of Staph in/on a patient who will undergo total joint replacement is a risk in
that the patient could go on to develop infection at the surgery site after surgery. The
purpose of this study is to evaluate if it is beneficial to to administer a questionnaire
and obtain cultures from various body sites from patients prior to surgery and also to
determine which body site(s) provide the best source of possible staph presence. If the pre
operative cultures indicate staph is present, an Infectious Disease specialist will be
consulted for standard of medical care consultation and treatment management. All patients
scheduled to have total joint arthroplasty are eligible to participate. The research team
will follow the study patients for 2 years after they undergo prosthetic joint implantation
to monitor for development of prosthetic joint infection.


Inclusion Criteria:

- All adult patients undergoing prosthetic joint implantation

Exclusion Criteria:

- None
We found this trial at
1
site
Emile St
Omaha, Nebraska 68198
(402) 559-4000
Univ of Nebraska Med Ctr A vital enterprise in the nation’s heartland, the University of...
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Omaha, NE
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