PMID: 11343560May 10, 2001Paper

Prophylactic intracavitary (pneumonectomy space) antibiotic instillation: a comparative study

Annals of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery : Official Journal of the Association of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeons of Asia
J D MillerJ D Urschel

Abstract

Postpneumonectomy empyema is a dreaded complication of pneumonectomy. The effectiveness of prophylactic intracavitary antibiotic instillation is not known. We conducted a retrospective review to assess the effect of pneumonectomy space antibiotic instillation on septic complications (empyema and bronchial fistula) of pneumonectomy. Ninety-three consecutive patients underwent pneumonectomy at our institution over a three-year period. Their charts were reviewed retrospectively and data was collected on age, gender, diagnosis, intravenous antibiotics, intracavitary (pneumonectomy space) antibiotics, empyemas, bronchial fistulas, length of hospital stay, and operative mortality. All 93 patients received 3 perioperative doses of prophylactic intravenous antibiotics. One group (n=47) of patients also received intraoperative intracavitary instillation of an antibiotic solution (penicillin G: 5 million units, bacitracin: 50,000 units, gentamicin: 60 mg, in 1 litre of saline) while the other group (n=46) did not. Age, gender, diagnosis, and length of stay were not significantly different in the two groups. There were no empyemas or bronchial fistulas in the intracavitary antibiotic group. Postpneumonectomy empyemas occurred in 6 (13%) p...Continue Reading

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