Are bile bacteria relevant to septic complications following biliary surgery?
- PMID: 6388716
- DOI: 10.1002/bjs.1800711113
Are bile bacteria relevant to septic complications following biliary surgery?
Abstract
Bile bacteriology, wound sepsis and the effect of prophylactic antibiotics have been studied in a controlled prospective double blind randomized trial on 375 patients undergoing elective cholecystectomy at a district general hospital. We have examined the overall prevalence of bacteria in bile and have identified several factors associated with an increased incidence. The identity of organisms isolated from a total of 21 patients with infected wound swabs was compared with isolates from the bile at operation, and in only two instances was there a correlation. Cephazolin, given either pre-operatively, or into the wound, reduced wound infection rates compared with a control group (from 11.8 to 2.4 per cent, P less than 0.005). We conclude that the majority of wound infections in this series were caused by organisms from the patients' skin or exogenous sources, rather than by bacteria from the biliary system.
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