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RETRACTED: Effects of laparoscopic splenectomy on surgical site wound infection in patients with spleen rupture: A meta‐analysis
RETRACTED: Effects of laparoscopic splenectomy on surgical site wound infection in patients with spleen rupture: A meta‐analysis
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RETRACTED: Effects of laparoscopic splenectomy on surgical site wound infection in patients with spleen rupture: A meta‐analysis
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RETRACTED: Effects of laparoscopic splenectomy on surgical site wound infection in patients with spleen rupture: A meta‐analysis
RETRACTED: Effects of laparoscopic splenectomy on surgical site wound infection in patients with spleen rupture: A meta‐analysis

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RETRACTED: Effects of laparoscopic splenectomy on surgical site wound infection in patients with spleen rupture: A meta‐analysis
RETRACTED: Effects of laparoscopic splenectomy on surgical site wound infection in patients with spleen rupture: A meta‐analysis
Journal Article

RETRACTED: Effects of laparoscopic splenectomy on surgical site wound infection in patients with spleen rupture: A meta‐analysis

2024
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Overview
A meta‐analysis was performed to compare the effects of laparoscopic splenectomy (LS) and open splenectomy (OS) for splenic rupture on postoperative surgical site wound infections and postoperative complications. A comprehensive computerised search was conducted for studies comparing LS with OS for the treatment of splenic rupture in the PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), VIP, and Wanfang databases, with the search including studies published in any language between the creation of the databases and August 2023. Two researchers independently screened the literature and extracted the data. Literature quality was assessed using the Newcastle‐Ottawa Scale, and the included data were collated and analysed using Stata 17.0 software for meta‐analysis. Twenty‐two studies involving 1545 patients were included. LS was superior to OS in the following aspects: reduced risk of postoperative surgical site wound infection (OR = 0.19, 95% CI: 0.11–0.34, p  = 0.000), shortened hospital stay (standardised mean difference = −1.73, 95% CI: −2.05 to −1.40, p  = 0.000), and reduced postoperative complication rate (OR = 0.22, 95% CI: 0.16–0.31, p  = 0.000). Compared with OS, LS has a lower rate of postoperative wound infection, shorter hospital stay, and reduced rate of postoperative complications. LS is safe and effective for the treatment of splenic rupture and can be promoted clinically.

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