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Clinical Trial
. 1994 Nov-Dec;40(6):680-4.

Bacteremia and bacterascites after endoscopic sclerotherapy for bleeding esophageal varices and prevention by intravenous cefotaxime: a randomized trial

Affiliations
  • PMID: 7859964
Clinical Trial

Bacteremia and bacterascites after endoscopic sclerotherapy for bleeding esophageal varices and prevention by intravenous cefotaxime: a randomized trial

W S Selby et al. Gastrointest Endosc. 1994 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

Thirty-one patients were randomized during 39 episodes of bleeding to receive either 1 g of intravenous cefotaxime (19 patients) or no antibiotic (20 patients) immediately before emergency endoscopic sclerotherapy. Blood was obtained for culture before and at 5 minutes, 4 hours, and 24 hours after the procedure. Specimens for culture were taken from the endoscope tip and channel, water bottle, and injection needle after sclerotherapy. When ascites was present (5 patients in the antibiotic group, 7 in the control group), fluid was obtained by paracentesis before endoscopy and at 4 and 24 hours. Bacteremia occurred in 1 of 19 patients in the antibiotic group (5.3%), compared with 6 of 19 in the control group (31.6%; p = .04). The cultured organisms were oral flora and usually also contaminated the endoscope and needle. No bacteria were cultured from ascitic fluid in any patient nor was the ascitic fluid white cell count elevated. Clinical infection attributable to sclerotherapy did not develop in any patient. In conclusion, the frequency of bacteremia after endoscopic sclerotherapy for bleeding esophageal varices can be reduced by prophylactic administration of intravenous cefotaxime. However, this may not be clinically relevant, given the absence of bacterascites and infection in this study. These findings do not support the routine use of antibiotics before sclerotherapy.

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