J Korean Soc Coloproctol.  2000 Apr;16(2):73-77.

Culture-Sensitivity Test and Infectious Complication in Perforated Appendicitis

Affiliations
  • 1Department of General Surgery, National Police Hospital, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
The purpose of this study was aimed to disclose main affected organisms in patients with perforated appendicitis and to analyze correlations between culture-sensitivity test and infectious complication.
METHODS
In 26 of 421 patients who had undergone appendectomy due to acute appendicitis from April 1996 to March 1999, we performed culture-sensitivity test. The clinical records of these patients were collected and reviewed about clinicopathological features and results of culture-sensitivity test, retrospectively. Culture material was collected in BBL transport media with cotton swab and cultured by MacConkey agar plate. The method of MIC by VITEK was used for sensitivity test.
RESULTS
Cultured organisms were E. coli (18 cases), Pseudomonas (4), Enterobacter (2), Enterococcus (1), and Proteus (1). In sensitivity test, sensitive antibiotics against all cultured organism were amikacin, ceftriaxone, imipenem and cefotetan. But ampicillin, sulfametoxazole/trimethoprim and piperacillin were mostly resistant. Infectious complications occurred in 11 of 26 patients (42.3%) and consisted of 9 wound infection and 2 intraabdominal abscess. Especially, 13 of 18 cases in which E. coli were isolated, were resistant to ampicillin. And they had infectious complications statistically more than those who were not resistant to ampicillin (p=0.036).
CONCLUSIONS
E. coli was a main organism in perforated appendicitis. In case of ampicillin-resistant E. coli, the patients were susceptible to infectious complication such as wound infection and intraabdominal abscess.

Keyword

Perforated appendicitis; Infectious complications; Culture-sensitivity test

MeSH Terms

Abscess
Agar
Amikacin
Ampicillin
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Appendectomy
Appendicitis*
Cefotetan
Ceftriaxone
Enterobacter
Enterococcus
Humans
Imipenem
Piperacillin
Proteus
Pseudomonas
Retrospective Studies
Wound Infection
Agar
Amikacin
Ampicillin
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Cefotetan
Ceftriaxone
Imipenem
Piperacillin
Full Text Links
  • JKSC
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr