IRRIGATION OF THE ABDOMINAL-CAVITY IN THE TREATMENT OF EXPERIMENTALLY-INDUCED MICROBIAL PERITONITIS - EFFICACY OF OZONATED SALINE

Citation
V. Ozmen et al., IRRIGATION OF THE ABDOMINAL-CAVITY IN THE TREATMENT OF EXPERIMENTALLY-INDUCED MICROBIAL PERITONITIS - EFFICACY OF OZONATED SALINE, The American surgeon, 59(5), 1993, pp. 297-303
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Surgery
Journal title
ISSN journal
00031348
Volume
59
Issue
5
Year of publication
1993
Pages
297 - 303
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-1348(1993)59:5<297:IOTAIT>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
Ozone is an oxidizing agent possessing potent in vitro microbicidal ca pacity. This study was designed to address the extent to which irrigat ion of the contaminated abdominal cavity using a saline solution prime d with ozone is effective in reducing morbidity and mortality. Gelatin capsules containing different quantities of a premixed slurry of filt ered human fecal material were implanted in the peritoneal cavities of a preliminary series of rats. Three inocula concentrations were selec ted for later experiments, based upon their ability to produce morbid consequences: (1) high (100% 1-day mortality), (2) medium (70% 3-day m ortality, 100% abscess rate in survivors), and (3) low (100% 10-day su rvival, 100% abscess rate). Fecal and abscess bacteriology were simila r in all rats. The peritoneal cavities of 240 rats then underwent feca l-capsule implantation (three groups of 80 rats/inoculum concentration ). At celiotomy 4 hours later, equal numbers of rats from each group w ere randomly assigned to one of four protocols: (1) no irrigation, (2) normal saline irrigation, (3) saline-cephalothin irrigation, and (4) ozonated saline irrigation. Each treatment lasted 5 minutes, using 100 ml of irrigation fluid. Mortality was significantly reduced when, in lieu of no irrigation, any of the irrigation solutions were used. Addi tionally, ozonated saline statistically proved the most effective irri gating solution for reducing abscess formation in survivors.