Perioperative management of neurosurgical patients with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.

@article{Akins2010PerioperativeMO,
  title={Perioperative management of neurosurgical patients with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.},
  author={Paul T. Akins and John S. Belko and Amit Banerjee and Kern Guppy and David Herbert and Tamara Slipchenko and Christi Delemos and Mark W. Hawk},
  journal={Journal of neurosurgery},
  year={2010},
  volume={112 2},
  pages={
          354-61
        }
}
OBJECT The emergence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has posed a challenge in the treatment of neurosurgical patients. The authors investigated the impact of MRSA colonization and infection in the neurosurgical population at a community-based, tertiary care referral center. METHODS Hospitalized patients under the care of the Kaiser Permanente inpatient neurosurgery service were prospectively entered into a database. In Phase I of the study, 492 consecutive patients were… 
Preoperative Prevalence of Staphylococcus aureus in Cardiothoracic and Neurological Surgical Patients
TLDR
The prevalence of MRSA carriers in cardiothoracic and neurological surgical patients presenting to an outpatient preoperative assessment center in Columbus, OH indicated that 4.25% of the sample carried MRSA and 25.
Prophylactic Effect of Vancomycin on Infection after Cranioplasty in Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus Carriers with Traumatic Brain Injury
TLDR
Preoperative MRSA screening and administration of vancomycin as a preoperative prophylactic antibiotic should be considered in MRSA carriers who are scheduled to cranioplasty to reduce MRSA or MRCNS SSI.
Topical vancomycin for neurosurgery wound prophylaxis: an interim report of a randomized clinical trial on drug safety in a diverse neurosurgical population.
TLDR
The authors' data indicate that the use of topical vancomycin is safe with no significant adverse effects and minimal systemic absorption, and no development of vancomYcin-resistant microorganisms.
A Larger Dose of Vancomycin Is Required in Adult Neurosurgical Intensive Care Unit Patients Due to Augmented Clearance
TLDR
2 dosing equations were derived to achieve optimal serum vancomycin concentrations for this special population of adult neurosurgical intensive care unit (ICU) patients and it was found thatAdult neuros surgical ICU patients have a significantly elevated ClVan.
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TLDR
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