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  • Title: [Bacteriological, clinical, and pharmacokinetic studies of perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis in head and neck surgery].
    Author: Borneff M, Hartmetz G, Roser F, Geyer G, Bleier R, Anagnostou M.
    Journal: Zentralbl Bakteriol Mikrobiol Hyg B Umwelthyg Krankenhaushyg Arbeitshyg Prav Med; 1987 Mar; 183(4):337-57. PubMed ID: 3109146.
    Abstract:
    The point of this study was to analyze the possible benefits of perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis in patients from whom oral cavity or throat tumors are removed. The criteria used to judge the efficacy of each treatment included the clinical course of the treatment, the bacterial colonization of the surgical area as well as the growth of bacteria during the postoperative phase. 50 patients were chosen and grouped according to their surgical treatment: laryngectomy (n = 20), partial laryngectomy (n = 22) or tongue, floor of the mouth, soft palate, gum or base of the tongue partial resection (n = 8). Within each surgical group, patients were randomly chosen for antibiotic prophylaxis; others constituted the untreated control group. The antibiotic prophylaxis consisted of 5 g Mezlocillin administered at the time of narcosis for 20 min followed by 0.5 g Metronidazol for 10 min. These medications were given in 8-hour intervals for three days following surgery. Investigation of the first 20 patients (prophylaxis group n = 7, control group n = 13) revealed that the combination of Mezlocillin and Metronidazol positively influenced post-operative recovery (no complications) while the patients without prophylactic antibiotic treatment suffered general or local complication leading to, in 10 cases, the necessity of postoperative therapy. On the basis of these results, the random grouping of the patients was ended and all 30 remaining patients were given the antibiotic prophylaxis. Regardless of antibiotic treatment, the great majority of microbes isolated from throat swabs and tracheal secretions were gram-negative, aerobic bacteria. A prerequisite for efficacious prophylaxis is that the antibiotics be applied before the operation, so that a sufficient concentration is present at the time of pharyngotomy. On the basis of pharmacokinetic investigations, administration of the antibiotic 30 min preoperatively fulfills this requirement. Further, our recommendation, based on our measurement of the spectrum of bacteria present and their growth is that the antibiotics be applied over a period of three days postoperatively. This recommendation is also based on the fact that some patients (those having undergone partial laryngectomy or tongue, floor of the mouth, base of the tongue partial resections) have suffered loss of the swallowing reflex so that there exists a continuous contamination of the surgical area with pathogens or facultative pathogens coming from the nasal or oral cavities.
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