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Dive into the research topics where Jeanette Wilkins is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeanette Wilkins.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1989

Factors influencing infection rate in open fracture wounds.

Michael J. Patzakis; Jeanette Wilkins

Seventy-seven infections in 1104 open fracture wounds were evaluated to identify those factors that predisposed to infection. Factors could be placed into three categories: (1) increased risk, (2) no effect, and (3) inconclusive. The single most important factor in reducing the infection rate was the early administration of antibiotics that provide antibacterial activity against both gram-positive and gram-negative microorganisms. In this study, surgical debridement was performed on all open fracture wounds.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1991

Analysis of 61 cases of vertebral osteomyelitis

Michael J. Patzakis; Santi Rao; Jeanette Wilkins; Tillman M. Moore; Paul J. Harvey

Sixty-one cases of bacterial vertebral osteomyelitis from July 1969 to July 1979 were analyzed. The ages of the 49 men and 12 women ranged from 21 to 66 years. The portal of entry was hematogenous in 58 cases, gunshot wounds in two cases, and and adjacent retroperitoneal abscess in one case. Biopsy was performed in 60 patients. There were 15 complications related to the disease. Gram-negative rods were the predominant bacteria isolated. Blood culture was positive in 13 of the 26 (50%) patients tested. Eleven of the 13 (85%) organisms isolated from the blood cultures correlated with organisms recovered from biopsy specimens. Eleven of the patients had more than one disk level involved. Of the 61 patients, 29 went on to spontaneous fusion, 17 were lost to follow-up study, 11 failed to fuse, three had surgical fusion, and one patient died. Recommendations for diagnosis included the collection of blood cultures and radionuclide bone scans. Management recommendations included systemic antibiotics for at least three weeks and immobilization with either bed rest or spinal orthoses. Surgery was indicated if an abscess was present, neurologic complications occurred, instability became a factor, or the medical treatment failed.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1983

Considerations in reducing the infection rate in open tibial fractures.

Michael J. Patzakis; Jeanette Wilkins; Tillman M. Moore

During the period from 1979 to 1980, 109 patients with open tibial fractures were treated by a cephalosporin and an aminoglycoside, and by saline and topical antibiotic wound irrigation; partial closure was used for Types I and II open tibial wounds, and all Type III wounds were left open. Stabilization was accomplished by plaster alone, external pins in plaster, or an external fixator with full transfixion pins. The overall infection rate was 4.5% (5 of 109 wounds) in this study. This represents a significant reduction from the previous infection rate of 14% in 254 open tibial fractures treated by the authors in previous years by all methods.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1983

Use of antibiotics in open tibial fractures.

Michael J. Patzakis; Jeanette Wilkins; Tillman M. Moore

Data concerning 1102 open fractures are presented with bacteriologic and antibiotic considerations analyzed in 363 open tibiae fractures treated in three prospective one-year studies during the period from 1970 to 1980. The highest infection rate was in open tibiae receiving no antibiotics (24%, 6 infections in 25 open tibial fracture wounds), and the lowest was in the group receiving a cephalosporin and an aminoglycoside (4.5%, 5 infections in 109 open tibial fracture wounds).


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1993

Septopal beads and autogenous bone grafting for bone defects in patients with chronic osteomyelitis

Michael J. Patzakis; Kai Mazur; Jeanette Wilkins; Randolph Sherman; Paul Holtom

Thirty-five patients with chronic osteomyelitis were treated with autogenous bone grafts for bone defects. Of 35 patients, two were lost to follow-up evaluation. There were 27 men and six women. The age range was from 18 to 62 years (median age, 29 years). The bones included 22 tibias, nine femurs, and two ulnas. The size of the bone defects ranged from 2.5 x 15 cm (median defect, 2.5 x 6 cm). The length of infection ranged from two to 540 months (median, 31 months). Twenty patients had nonunions and 19 patients required soft-tissue muscle transfers. Patients were treated with systemic antibiotics and/or gentamicin (Septopal) antibiotic beads. Twelve patients were treated with Septopal beads. The range of follow-up evaluation was 24 to 68 months (median, 47 months). Thirty-one of 33 patients had one bone-graft procedure and two patients required two. The time from initial debridement and infection control to bone graft for patients not requiring soft-tissue muscle flaps was one to six weeks (median time, four weeks). For patients requiring soft-tissue muscle transfer, the range was six to nine weeks (median, six weeks). The median time to bone-graft incorporation was six months. All fractures united. Complications included two refractures from auto accidents in the immediate postoperative period, one partial muscle loss, one skin-graft loss, four pin tract draining sites, and two antibiotic-related skin rashes. There was one recurrent infection, and the infection arrest rate was 97%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1986

Infection following intramedullary nailing of long bones. Diagnosis and management.

Michael J. Patzakis; Jeanette Wilkins; Donald A. Wiss

In 30 patients (23 femurs and 7 tibias) with infection of long bone fractures following intramedullary (IM) nailing, the follow-up study ranged from eight to 84 months (mean, 20 months). Six patients retained active infection at the time of follow-up examination. Ununited fractures were present in four and sequestra in two patients. Stabilization for fracture healing after irrigation and debridement with appropriate systemic antibiotic therapy was the critical factor in the orthopedic management of this series of patients.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1987

Surgical findings in clenched-fist injuries

Michael J. Patzakis; Jeanette Wilkins; Robert L. Bassett

A total of 191 patients (representing 194 skin lacerations) hospitalized for clenched-fist injuries were evaluated for deep structure involvement. Tendon, joint, cartilage, and/or bone were damaged in 75%. Tendon involvement occurred in 28 of 138 (20.3%), joint capsule violation in 99 of 146 (67.8%), free articular cartilage fragments in 8 of 139 (5.8%) and articular-bone indentations in 23 of 139 (16.5%). All patients with clenched-fist lacerations or puncture wounds over joints should be treated by surgical debridement and exploration of the deep structures, including the joint, at the time they first seek medical care.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1990

Peripheral teflon catheters. Potential source for bacterial contamination of orthopedic implants

Jeanette Wilkins; Michael J. Patzakis

To detect low numbers of bacterial cells on Teflon catheters removed from peripheral veins, 74 catheter tips were incubated in thioglycollate media for up to ten days. Fifteen (20.3%) of the catheters were found to be culture-positive. Propionibacterium acnes was isolated from seven, Staphylococcus epidermidis from six, and Staphylococcus haemolyticus and Staphylococcus hominis from one each, all common skin organisms associated with infection of implants. An increase in documentation of bacterial contamination resulted from incubating greater than 72 hours; this allowed the slower-replicating Propionibacterium acnes to grow to detectable numbers. Because of these findings and those of others, attention is focused on the peripheral vein conduit as a potential source for hematogenous seeding of implants with bacterial cells. Changing peripheral catheters within 24 hours is recommended to reduce the constant risk of occult bacteremia.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1984

The Mechanisms of Action for Beta-Lactam Antibiotics and Inhibitors of Bacterial Protein Synthesis

Jeanette Wilkins; Gerard E. Fareau; Michael J. Patzakis

The replication of bacteria, when unchecked, may lead to morbidity or mortality in a susceptible host. The majority of antimicrobial agents either modify or inhibit the synthesis of key substances and are reflected by morphologic, if not lethal, changes. Activity occurs during synthesis of the bacterial cell wall and synthesis of bacterial protein. These two events are described in terms of the local mechanism of action of different classes of antibiotics. The role of antibacterial agents in the replication of bacteria should be clearly understood before antibiotic therapy is administered.


Western Journal of Medicine | 1989

Wound site as a predictor of complications following deep nail punctures to the foot.

Michael J. Patzakis; Jeanette Wilkins; W W Brien; Vincent S. Carter

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Michael J. Patzakis

University of Southern California

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Vincent S. Carter

University of Southern California

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Paul Holtom

University of Southern California

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Tillman M. Moore

University of Southern California

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