The conduct of cholecystectomy: incision, drainage, bacteriology and postoperative complications
- PMID: 7083079
The conduct of cholecystectomy: incision, drainage, bacteriology and postoperative complications
Abstract
The benefits of some ancillary techniques of cholecystectomy are exaggerated by retrospective study of selected patients. Therefore, the authors performed a prospective, randomized study of 100 consecutive patients who underwent simple elective cholecystectomy for chronic cholecystitis and cholelithiasis. No patient was excluded because of incomplete hemostasis or fear of bile leakage. The frequency of pulmonary complications and wound infections was independent of the type of incision--vertical or subcostal. Peritoneal drainage was found to be unnecessary. Short-term drainage may increase the frequency of postoperative fever, but did not increase pulmonary complications or wound infections. In these patients, intra-abdominal sepsis is rare; wound infections were uncommon and the gallbladder bile was usually sterile and not the cause of postoperative infection.
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