2017
DOI: 10.18203/2349-2902.isj20175399
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Study of bacterial flora and their antibiotic sensitivity in peritonitis of various causes

Abstract: Background: Peritonitis is a common emergency encountered by surgeons the world over. Despite a better understanding of pathophysiology, advances in diagnosis, surgery, antimicrobial therapy and intensive care support, peritonitis remains a potentially fatal affliction. Intra-abdominal sepsis is important causes of mortality and morbidity. The treatment is based on rapid fluid resuscitation, initiation of antibiotic therapy and surgical intervention. The antibiotic chosen must cover the most frequently expecte… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 15 publications
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“…One study by Kumar et al, where gastroduodenal perforation due to acid peptic disease accounted for 45% of cases and 16% cases due to appendicular perforation as the second common cause (29). In a study by Gebremedhn et al, trauma was the commonest cause of emergency laparotomies (30), and in a study by Sahani et al, ileal perforation was the commonest (28%), followed by gastric (20%), duodenal (20%), jejunal (10%) and appendicular (10%) (31). Overall, the appendicular perforation and peptic perforation contributed the most to peritonitis in our study, accounting for approximately 60%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…One study by Kumar et al, where gastroduodenal perforation due to acid peptic disease accounted for 45% of cases and 16% cases due to appendicular perforation as the second common cause (29). In a study by Gebremedhn et al, trauma was the commonest cause of emergency laparotomies (30), and in a study by Sahani et al, ileal perforation was the commonest (28%), followed by gastric (20%), duodenal (20%), jejunal (10%) and appendicular (10%) (31). Overall, the appendicular perforation and peptic perforation contributed the most to peritonitis in our study, accounting for approximately 60%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%