Bacterial contamination of femoral head allografts from living donors

Authors

  • Stephan B W Vehmeyer
  • Arnoud R M Slooff
  • Rolf M Bloem
  • Pieter L C Petit

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/000164702753671740

Abstract

We analyzed the bacterial contamination rate of femoral head allografts from living donors and determined the true bacterial load with cultures from the grafts in their entirety in a specially prepared medium. During 4 years we took swab cultures from 2,679 grafts of which 2,414 (90%) were negative. In a period of 12 months, grafts rejected for reasons other than infectious disease were cultured in their entirety to determine the true bacterial load. Of the 106 grafts included, 15 were contaminated. Microorganisms were isolated from 10 of the 91 initially swab culturenegative grafts (9%) and from only 5 of the 15 swab culture-positive grafts, most of which were normal skin contaminants. Swab culture negative grafts apparently may still be contaminated. It seems wise to subject all femoral head allografts from living donors to antibacterial processing.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2002-01-01

How to Cite

Vehmeyer, S. B. W., Slooff, A. R. M., Bloem, R. M., & Petit, P. L. C. (2002). Bacterial contamination of femoral head allografts from living donors. Acta Orthopaedica, 73(2), 165–169. https://doi.org/10.1080/000164702753671740