

Author: Wiseman James Brown Carlos V.R Weng Janie Salim Ali Rhee Peter Demetriades Demetrios
Publisher: Southeastern Surgical Congress
ISSN: 0003-1348
Source: The American Surgeon, Vol.72, Iss.10, 2006-10, pp. : 947-950
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Abstract
Little is known what effect splenectomy for trauma has on early postoperative infectious complications. Our aim was to determine if splenectomy increases early postoperative infections in trauma patients undergoing laparotomy. We reviewed all trauma patients undergoing splenectomy from June 2002 through December 2004. Each splenectomy patient was matched to a unique trauma patient who underwent laparotomy without splenectomy based on age, gender, mechanism of injury, injury severity score, and presence of colon or other hollow visceral injury. Outcomes included infectious complications including pneumonia, urinary tract infection, bacteremia, and intra-abdominal abscess, as well as mortality. There were 98 splenectomy patients and 98 controls. The splenectomy patients had more overall infectious complications (45%
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