1 / 51

SURGICAL INFECTIONS

SURGICAL INFECTIONS. Begashaw M (MD). Surgical infection. D efined as an infection related to or complicating a surgical therapy and requiring surgical management R elated to surgical therapy but may not require surgery - UTI after catheterization Pulmonary CXN after intubation

ulani
Télécharger la présentation

SURGICAL INFECTIONS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SURGICAL INFECTIONS Begashaw M (MD)

  2. Surgical infection • Defined as aninfection related to or complicating a surgical therapy and requiring surgical management • Related to surgical therapy but may not require surgery - UTI after catheterization • Pulmonary CXN after intubation • Tracheotomy site infection • Post-operative wound infection

  3. CLASSIFICATION • Pre operative infections:before a surgical procedure - Accidents - Appendicitis - Boils - Carbuncle - Pyomyositis

  4. Operative infections • Happen during a surgical procedure • Due to-contamination of the site -poor tissue handling

  5. Postoperative infections • Occur after a surgical procedure • Contamination is from the patient’s source e.g - Surgical wound infections - Urinary & respiratory tract infection

  6. PATHOGENESIS • Elements or factors include: - An infectious agent - A susceptible host - Favorable external factors/ environment

  7. Infectious agents 1- Aerobic bacteria - Staphylococcus aureus - Streptococci - Klebsiella - E. coli 2- Anaerobic bacteria - Bacteroides - Peptostreptococci - Clostridia

  8. Infectious agents 3- Fungi - Histoplasma - Candida - Nocardia and actinomycetes 4- Parasites - Entamebahystolytica-amebic liver abscess - Echinococcus - hydatid cyst

  9. Host Susceptibility • Reduced immunity/host defense -Diabetes mellitus -TB -AIDS

  10. Local and external factors • Local factors - Poor vascularization - Poor perfusion of blood and oxygen - Dead tissue - Foreign bodies - Closure under tension • External factors-break in the sterility technique

  11. Clinical manifestation • Hotness, redness, edema/swelling,pain & loss of function • Non-Specific symptoms- Fever, chills, tachycardia • Constitutionalsymptoms - Fatigue, low-grade fever

  12. Investigations • WBC count: usually elevated • Gram stain ,culture & sensitivity • Blood culture:bacterermia • Biopsy: Histologic • X-ray and ultrasound

  13. Post-Operative Wound Infection • Is contamination of a surgical wound during or after a surgical procedure • Is usually confined superficial • Below the fascia - deep infection

  14. Types of Surgical Site Infections

  15. Source of infection • 80% cases - patient (Endogenous) -skin ,transected viscus. In about • 20% cases - Exogenous -environment -operating staff -unsterile surgical equipment

  16. Clinical Findings • On the 5th-7thpostoperativeday - Fever - Wound pain - Wound edema and induration - Local hotness and tenderness - Wound/stitch abscess - Serous discharge - Crepitation

  17. Wound infection

  18. Management - Remove stitches to allow drainage - Local wound care - Antibiotics-if systemic manifestations/cellulitis

  19. Prevention • Shorten preop. Hospitalization • Loose weight • Treatment of remote infection • Shorten operative time • Restore host defense • Decrease endogenous bacterial cont. • Good surgical technique • Proper asepsis and antisepsis • Chemoprophylaxis

  20. Abscess • Localized collection of pus • Contains necrotic tissue &suppuration Etiology -Pyogenicorganisms - staphylococci

  21. Abscess

  22. Clinical features - Superficial (Hot, pain, edema, rednessand loss of function) - Fluctuation - Discharge & sinus - Systemic - fever, sweating, tachycardia

  23. Treatment - Drainage byincision - Debridement & curettage - Delayed primary or secondary closure - Antibiotics - systemic symptoms or signs of spread occur-cloxacillin

  24. Abcsess drainage

  25. Erysipelas _ Acute skin infection that is more superficial than cellulitis _ Etiology - Group A Streptococcus (GABHS) _Clinical Features Intense erythema, induration, &sharply demarcated borders _Treatment - penicillin or first generation cephalosporin - cephalexin

  26. Eryspelas

  27. Cellulitis • Non-suppurativeinfection of skin and subcutaneous tissues • Usually involves the extremities • Identifiable portal of entry • Etiology: skin flora - Beta hemolytic streptococci - Staphylococci - Clostridium perfringens

  28. Clinical Features • Source of infection -trauma, recent surgery -diabetes - cracked skin -foreign bodies • Systemic - fever, chills, malaise • Pain, tenderness, edema, erythema with poorly defined margins

  29. cellulitis

  30. Cellulitis

  31. Investigation • CBC, blood cultures • Culture and Gram stain • Plain radiographs- R/o osteomyelitis • Clellulitis Vs Eryspela -Cellulitis: indistinct border -Erysipela: sharp boarder

  32. Management - Rest - Elevation/immobilize - Hot, wet pack - High dose broad spectrum antibiotics IV _Cloxacillin 500 mg QID/cephalexin

  33. Pyomyositis • Acute bacterial infection of skeletal muscles with accumulation of pus inthe intramuscular area • Occurs in the lower limbs &trunk • Associated factors-Poor nutrition -immune deficiency -hot climate -intense muscle activity

  34. Etiology -Staphylococcus aureus - common -Streptococci

  35. Clinical Features • Sub-acute onset • Localized muscle pain & swelling • Tenderness • Induration, erythema, heat • Muscle necrosis • Fever

  36. Pyomyositis

  37. Treatment • Intravenous antibiotics- cloxacillin • Surgical drainage • Excision -necrotic muscle • Supportive care-analgesics

  38. Necrotizing fasciitis • Rapidly spreading, very painful infection of the deep fascia with necrosis of tissues • Some bacteria create gas that can be felt as crepitus • Infection spreads rapidly along deep fascial plane and is limb and life threatening

  39. Etiology • Polymicrobial - Streptococci- hemolytic - Staphylococci - Gram negative bacteria - Anaerobes - Clostridia

  40. Clinical Features • Pain out of proportion • Erythema, edema, tenderness, ± crepitus ±fever • Infection spreads very rapidly • Rapidly become very sick/toxic • Skin turns dusky blue and black (secondary to thrombosis &necrosis) • Induration, formation of bullae • Cutaneousgangrene, subcutaneous emphysema

  41. Necrotizing fascitis

  42. Treatment • Rigorous resuscitation • Multiple surgical debridement: remove all necrotic tissue, copious irrigation • IV antibiotics-Ceftriaxone +Metronidazole

  43. Gas Gangrene • Characterized by muscle necrosis and systemic toxicity • Follows - Trauma - Surgery - Foreign bodies - Vascular insufficiency

  44. Etiology -Clostridium perfringens -80% of cases - polymicrobial infection

  45. Clinical features - Sudden and persistent severe pain at wound site - Localized tense edema, pallor , tenderness - Gas noted on palpation or radiograph - brownish discoloration of skin and hemorrhagic bullae - Dirty brown discharge with offensive, sweetish odor - Systemic - fever, tachycardia,hypotension

  46. Gas on soft tissue

  47. Management • Surgery - important -Extensive, wide excision -Amputation -Antibiotic -Supportive - Intravenous infusions - Blood transfusions - Close monitoring

  48. TETANUS • Cl. Tetani, produce neurotoxin • Penetrating wound ( rusty nail, thorn ) • Usually wound healed when symptoms appear • Incubation period: 7-10 days • Trismus - first symptom, stiffness in neck & back • Anxious look with mouth drawn up ( risussardonicus) • Respiration & swallowing progressively difficult • Reflex convulsions along with tonic spasm • Death by exhaustion, aspiration or asphyxiation

  49. TETANUS Treatment: wound debridement, penicillin Muscle relaxants, ventilatory support Nutritional support Prophylaxis: wound care, antibiotics Human TIG in high risk ( un-immunized ) Commence active immunization ( T toxoid) Previously immunized- booster >10 years needs a booster dose booster <10 years- no treatment in low risk wounds

More Related