Abstract

To evaluate the clinical significance of bacterial contamination in perforated duodenal ulcers, we prospectively studied septic complications in 184 consecutive patients. All patients received parenteral antibiotics (over 90 percent preoperatively) for at least 7 days. Thirteen infections developed in eight patients (4.3 percent). Peritoneal cultures, performed in 143 unselected patients, were positive in 33.6 percent of cases. Bacterial growth occurred more often and in heavier amounts in patients who underwent exploration late (after 48 hours) and those who had gross peritoneal soilage. Candida and gram-negative organisms predominated, but there was no correlation with pathogens that produced abscesses or wound infections. Old age and late exploration significantly increased the risk of infection. Neither peritoneal soiling nor a positive culture was likely to be clinically important when exploration was performed within 2 days of perforation. We treat perforated ulcers as clean-contaminated cases, and recommend that three doses of prophylactic antibiotics be begun preoperatively in all patients.

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