The manifestation of postoperative wound infection has a tri-factorial
basis: the overall systemic trauma and the additional effects of prem
orbidity (age, diabetes, etc.), the local host damage resulting from b
oth the accident and surgery, and the bacterial contamination of the w
ound. The first factor is only moderately open to intervention, howeve
r, the amount of local host damage caused during the operation can be
influenced directly by the surgeon who must ensure that his operating
techniques are non-aggressive and in line with current knowledge. The
factor of the intraoperative bacterial inoculum can be modified by att
ention to hygiene. The latter two factors are in direct relation to th
e following two hypotheses: Every wound is able to tolerate some local
host damage and some bacterial inoculum without manifestation of infe
ction, The bacterial wound flora is the product of the bacterial invas
ion force and the local wound conditions. The bacterial wound flora an
d the local condition of the wound are interrelated. If either factor
exceeds the tolerable threshold, infection will become manifest, i.e.
there will be an uncontrollable proliferation of bacteria. The level o
f this breaking point may depend upon certain systemic host factors su
ch as age, diabetes, or immunodeficiency. Consequently, the prevention
of infection must focus simultaneously on minimizing the local bacter
ial inoculum and optimizing local wound conditions. Future studies sho
uld concentrate on identifying the exact nature of the individual fact
ors promoting infection, their quantification, and their relative impo
rtance.