Abstract

Aim. To analyze the complications of liver and pancreas surgeries, including infectious complications, and to describe the evolution of microbial flora in the hepatopancreatobiliary surgery unit.Materials and methods. The study involved 650 patients who underwent pancreatoduodenectomy and 1253 patients after liver resection. Types of preoperative biliary drainage were evaluated in terms of their influence on the treatment results. The incidence and nature of postoperative bile leakage were studied. The study included an analysis of microbial flora in the hepatopancreatobiliary surgery unit for 10 years.Results. The rate of significant complications, including infectious complications, appeared to be unaffected by a type of bile ducts drainage with potential infection at a standard course after pancreatoduodenectomy. A pancreatic fistula is considered to be a major factor in the development of abdominal infectious complications and the main cause of unfavorable outcomes. A bile leakage was most often revealed after liver resection in 95 observations (7.5%), and significantly more often after extensive liver resections. Gram-negative flora prevailed in bile from external drains of bile ducts and wound exudates in two thirds of cases. Gram-positive microorganisms were detected in one third of patients, fungi – in less than 5% of cases. The drainage fluids mostly obtained polyresistant gram-negative microorganisms. The majority of strains revealed resistance to cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, penicillins, and an increasing resistance to carbapenems in dynamics.Conclusion. Bacterobilia after bile duct drainage significantly determines a microbial landscape of a hepatopancreatobiliary surgery unit. Pancreatodigestive anastomotic leakage is recognized as an important predictor of infectious complications in the area of intervention after pancreatoduodenectomy. Cases of this kind require the antimicrobial therapy with respect to the initial flora of the biliary tract. A bile leakage is considered to be a main contributor to infectious complications after liver resection. Extensive liver resection can lead to a sepsis-like state in the early postoperative period, predisposing to infectious complications.

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