In cases of community-acquired peritonitis, the adequacy of emprical antibiotic treatment has been shown to attenuate mortality and morbidity. The impact of empirical antibiotics on the outcome of postoperative peritonitis has never been evaluated. This study included 100 consecutively studied patients with postoperative peritonitis. The adequacy of emprical treatment was determined by means of culture and susceptibility data obtained at the time of reoperation, and the effect of such treatment on outcome was evaluated. One hundred resistant pathogens were isolated from 70 patients, of whom 45% died; by comparison, mortality among those from whom susceptible organisms were isolated was 16% (P < .05). Inadequate empirical treatment was administered to 54 patients and was associated with poorer outcome (P < or = .05). The outcome of postoperative peritonitis is affected by the choice and adequacy of the initial empirical antibiotic therapy. Late changes in antibiotic therapy based on culture results did not affect outcome when the initial regimen was inadequate.
Extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBLPE) were isolated from clinical specimens from 130 to 140 patients/year in 1989-1991 in our hospital. In February 1992, a control program was initiated: screening tests in 3 intensive care units (ICUs) and contact-isolation precautions in all units. The septic surgical unit served as an isolation ward for surgical patients from whom ESBLPE was isolated. In 1992, the incidence of ESBLPE acquisition failed to decrease, and most acquisitions occurred in 3 ICUs. Critical evaluation of implementation of isolation procedures in these ICUs prompted corrective measures for barrier precautions. The incidence of acquired cases subsequently decreased, and a second evaluation determined that these measures had been correctly applied. The incidence of acquired cases in the septic surgical unit was lower than those in the other units. Decreases were also found in the incidence of acquisition of other hand-transmitted multidrug-resistant organisms. Barrier precautions, screening tests for ICU patients, and grouping of cohorts after ICU discharge are effective in controlling the spread of multidrug-resistant microorganisms by cross-contamination. The outbreak was effectively controlled without restricting antimicrobial use.
Malaria should be suspected in all patients presenting with complaints after travel to an area where malaria is endemic, and these patients should undergo blood microscopy.
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