Foundations & Timing - Prophylaxis Kick‑off
- Definition: Antibiotics given before surgical incision or tissue contamination to prevent infection.
- Goal: Prevent Surgical Site Infections (SSI); vital in orthopaedics (implants, high SSI risk).
- Principles:
- Timing: Pre-operative administration is key.
- Intra-operative re-dosing: For prolonged surgeries or major blood loss.
- Duration: Usually single dose; ≤ 24 hours post-operatively.
- Timing: Pre-operative administration is key.
- Surgical Wounds & Prophylaxis:
- Clean: (e.g., arthroplasty) - Prophylaxis needed.
- Clean-Contaminated: (e.g., recent open fractures) - Prophylaxis needed.
⭐ Administer first prophylactic antibiotic dose within 60 minutes before surgical incision (or within 120 minutes for Vancomycin/fluoroquinolones).
Agents & Regimens - Ortho's Antibiotic Shield
- Standard Prophylaxis: Cefazolin
- Spectrum: Excellent against Gram-positive cocci (Staphylococcus aureus, S. epidermidis), common surgical site pathogens.
- Adult Dose: 2g IV administered 30-60 minutes before surgical incision.
- Weight-based adjustment: If patient weight >120kg, use 3g IV.
- Intraoperative re-dosing: Every 4 hours (or after 2 half-lives) during prolonged procedures to maintain adequate tissue concentrations.
- Penicillin/Beta-Lactam Allergy:
- For true IgE-mediated (anaphylactic) reactions:
- Clindamycin: 600-900mg IV.
- Vancomycin: 15mg/kg IV (infused over 60-120 min).
- 📌 Vanco for MRSA/Allergy.
- For true IgE-mediated (anaphylactic) reactions:
- MRSA Considerations:
- Screen high-risk patients (e.g., prior MRSA, nursing home, recent hospitalization).
- If MRSA risk is high or confirmed colonization:
- Vancomycin: 15mg/kg IV (preferred).
- Teicoplanin: Alternative (loading dose then maintenance).
⭐ For patients with a true IgE-mediated penicillin allergy, Clindamycin or Vancomycin are common alternative prophylactic antibiotics in orthopaedic surgery.
Procedure‑Specific Protocols - Surgical Safeguards
- Total Joint Arthroplasty (TJA - Hip, Knee), Fracture fixation (ORIF), Spine surgery:
- Prophylaxis: Cefazolin (or other 1st/2nd gen cephalosporin).
- Administer within 60 minutes before surgical incision.
- Open Fractures (Gustilo-Anderson classification):
- Grade I/II: Cefazolin. Duration: 24-48 hours.
- Grade III: Cefazolin + Aminoglycoside (e.g., Gentamicin). (Extensive contamination: consider Pip-Tazo). Duration: 48-72 hours or until soft tissue coverage.
- Arthroscopy:
- Generally not routine.
- Consider for prolonged procedures (>2 hours), or with implants (e.g., ACL reconstruction), or in immunocompromised patients.
- Special Situations:
- Immunocompromised patients, revision surgeries: May require broader spectrum or tailored prophylaxis.
- Known MRSA colonization: Vancomycin or Teicoplanin recommended.
- Duration:
- Typically not exceeding 24 hours post-op for most procedures.
- Prolonged use ↑ risk of resistance and side effects.
⭐ For uncomplicated primary Total Joint Arthroplasty, antibiotic prophylaxis is typically recommended for no more than 24 hours post-operatively.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Cefazolin is the drug of choice for most orthopaedic surgical prophylaxis.
- Administer IV antibiotics within 60 minutes before skin incision.
- Use vancomycin or clindamycin for beta-lactam allergy.
- Vancomycin infusion: start 1-2 hours pre-incision (longer infusion).
- Redose antibiotics for surgeries >4 hours or with blood loss >1500 mL.
- Discontinue prophylaxis within 24 hours post-operatively.
- Consider MRSA coverage (vancomycin) for high-risk patients or high institutional MRSA prevalence.
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