Imagine preparing for spinal surgery hoping for a smooth recovery. Instead, some patients deal with painful infections at the incision site. This worry is real for over a thousand people studied here.
Researchers looked at 1,049 patients who had spinal operations. They found specific things that made infections more likely. Older age and having diabetes both raised the risk significantly. Longer surgery times and more blood loss also played a role.
Some factors lowered the risk instead. Higher levels of albumin in the blood helped protect patients. The way doctors closed the wound also mattered. Doctors identified Staphylococcus aureus as the most common germ in these infections.
This study looked at past records, not a new treatment trial. It shows links between factors and infections rather than proving cause. A tool called a nomogram might help doctors predict risk for individual patients. It is user-friendly and could guide better decisions.