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Risk of Infection after Penetrating Abdominal Trauma

List of authors.
  • Ronald Lee Nichols, M.S., M.D.,
  • Jeffrey W. Smith, M.S., M.P.H.,
  • Daniel B. Klein, M.D.,
  • Donald D. Trunkey, M.D.,
  • Ronald H. Cooper, M.D.,
  • Michael F. Adinolfi, M.D.,
  • and John Mills, M.D.

Abstract

To identify the risk factors for the development of postoperative septic complications in patients with intestinal perforation after abdominal trauma, and to compare the efficacies of single-drug and dual-drug prophylactic antibiotic therapy, we studied 145 patients who presented with abdominal trauma and intestinal perforation at two hospitals between July 1979 and June 1982. Logistic-regression analysis showed that a higher risk of infection (P<0.05) was associated with increased age, injury to the left colon necessitating colostomy, a larger number of units of blood or blood products administered at surgery, and a larger number of injured organs. The presence of shock on arrival, which was found to increase the risk of infection when this factor was analyzed individually, did not add predictive power. Patients with postoperative sepsis were hospitalized significantly longer than were patients without infection (13.8 vs. 7.7 days, P<0.0001). Both treatment regimens — cefoxitin given alone and clindamycin and gentamicin given together—resulted in similar infection rates, drug toxicity, duration of hospitalization, and costs. (N Engl J Med 1984; 311: 1065–70.)

Funding and Disclosures

Presented in part at the 23rd Annual Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and and Chemotherapy, Las Vegas, Nev., October 1983.

Supported in part by grants from the Upjohn Company and Merck, Sharpe and Dohme.

We are indebted to Drs. Dionysious Voros, Gary Slutkin, Cary Savitch, Lawrence Dall, and Joseph Marzouk for assistance with data acquisition, to Dr. Gary Neidert for statistical analysis of the data, to Luciana Vivoda for excellent technical assistance, to Luci Aran for help in manuscript preparation, and to the surgical house staff and nursing service of Charity Hospital of Louisiana at New Orleans, San Francisco General Hospital, and Tulane Medical Center Hospital and Clinic, without whose help this study could not have been done.

Author Affiliations

From the Department of Surgery, Tulane University School of Medicine, and the Departments of Surgery and Medicine, University of California at San Francisco School of Medicine. Address reprint requests to Dr. Nichols at the Department of Surgery, Tulane University School of Medicine, 1430 Tulane Ave., New Orleans, LA 70112.

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