Короткий опис (реферат):
Background: At present postoperative infectious complications are reported worldwide to be the commonest in inpatients at surgical and intensive care units. Based on statistics
on the infection control prevention, WHO has raised concerns over a high risk of infectious complications, which may
occur following the delivery of health care at any medical
settings. According to WHO reports the incidence of infectious complications among patients in high-income countries
reaches 7 – 10 %, while in low-income countries, this figure
reaches up to 20 %. In recent decades, the etiological structure of postsurgical infectious complications has been remaining almost unchanged. The aim of this study is to identify the
leading causative agents of infectious complications in patients with surgical diseases.
Patients and methods: The study involved 137 middle-aged
inpatients (mean age – 56 ± 3 years) with post-surgical infectious complications of various localization who underwent the
surgeries at the Surgical Department of M. Pirogov Vinnitsa
Regional Clinical Hospital for 2007 – 2019. To investigate
aerobic and opportunistic anaerobic microflora, samples were
collected using sterile cotton swabs from each patient suspected to have infected areas prior the beginning of antibiotic therapy. Statistical analysis of the results obtained was
performed by standard software packages “Microsoft Excel
2010” and “IBM SPSS Statistics 22”.
Results: Gram-positive cocci have been found out as the
commonest causative agents for postoperative infectious
complications in the patients with surgical diseases as evidenced by the isolation rate over 60 % in the samples studied.
It should be noted that the overwhelming majority of isolates
are constituted by opportunistic microorganisms, representatives of the genus Staphylococcus (n = 45) with the prevalence
of coagulase-negative species. Enterococcus spp. cause about
16 % of complications in the patients at the surgical wards.
Gram-negative microorganisms have been found out as significantly rarer (35.3 %) compared with gram-positive microorganisms in the patients studied. Non-fermenting gram-negative bacteria were isolated in 34 patients out of 137 patients,
and A. baumannii was found as the dominant causative agent
of postoperative complications in 27 patients that is 10 times
more common than Staphylococcus aureus. P. aeruginosa bacteria and Candida yeast-like fungi were detected to cause infectious complications in the patients with surgical pathology
in only 3 % of cases.
Conclusion: Etiological structure of postoperative infectious
complications differs depending on the type of complication
itself. In cases of abscess, mediastinitis, infectious complications in oesophageal perforations, gram-positive cocci have
been found out as a leading etiological factor, while gramnegative microorganisms are the commonest causative agents
for phlegmons. Despite the almost unchanged spectrum of
the primary causative agents of infectious complications in
patients at surgical wards, recently there have been observed
some deviations from the conventional etiological structure.
Therefore, it is of great clinical importance to monitor and
detect even slight changes occurring in the spectrum of microorganisms that cause complications, depending on the
types of surgical intervention, its location and some others