Affiliation:
1. Surgical Department, Hoima Hospital, Uganda
Abstract
Abstract
In a district rural hospital in Uganda, 850 surgical patients were evaluated prospectively over a 3-year period to compare the clinical efficacy of conventional postoperative penicillin therapy with single-dose ampicillin prophylaxis for hernia repair and ectopic pregnancy, and with single-dose ampicillin-metronidazole prophylaxis for hysterectomy and caesarean section. The high rate of postoperative infection usually encountered in African hospitals after conventional treatment with penicillin for 7 days was significantly reduced with the new regimen: from 7·5 to 0 per cent in hernia repair and from 10·7 to 2·4 per cent in ectopic pregnancy; from 20·0 to 3·4 per cent in hysterectomy and from 38·2 to 15·2 per cent in caesarean section. Length of hospital stay and postoperative mortality rates were also significantly reduced. Single-dose ampicillin prophylaxis with or without metronidazole, although rarely used in developing countries, is more cost effective than standard penicillin treatment.
Funder
A.V.S.I. Italian Cooperation
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Reference23 articles.
1. Surgery in the developing world: the challenge to Britain;Coonick;J R Soc Med,1992
2. Incidence and estimated need of caesarean section, inguinal hernia repair, and operation for strangulated hernia in rural Africa;Nordberg;BMJ,1984
3. Infection control with limited resources;Scott;Africa Health,1990
4. Unrecognised, misunderstood and undefined: infection control in developing countries;Africa Health,1990
5. Septic complications of 100 abdominal deliveries in the rural tropics;Moran;Trop Doct,1990
Cited by
27 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献