Margaret J. Wertz
University of Washington
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Annals of Surgery | 1982
E S Lennard; E P Dellinger; Margaret J. Wertz; B H Minshew
Outcomes of 65 patients after operation who had exhibited a clinical response to treatment for intra-abdominal sepsis were compared based on the presence or absence of leukocytosis and fever at the conclusion of antibiotic therapy. Fifty-one patients were afebrile when antibiotics were stopped. Intra-abdominal infection developed in 7 of 21 (33%) who had a persistent leukocytosis, but no intra-abdominal infections developed after operation in 30 patients who had normal WBC counts at the end of antibiotic treatment (p < 0.005). Nosocomial infections developed in 6 (12%) of the 51 patients, and there was no difference in the incidence between patients with or without leukocytosis. Eleven of 14 (79%) patients who were still febrile when antibiotics were discontinued developed infections after operation. Nosocomial infections occurred in three (21%) and intra-abdominal infections in eight (57%). Of the 15 patients who developed intra-abdominal infection after operation, only four responded to appropriate antibiotic treatment without requiring further surgery. The other patients required surgical management for definitive control within two months of the initial operation. In conclusion, patients at risk of developing infection after operation after exhibiting a clinical response to treatment of intra-abdominal sepsis are those who are afebrile with a persistent leukocytosis or who are still febrile when antibiotics are stopped.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1992
Larry M. Gentilello; Roy Cobean; Alonzo P. Walker; Ernest E. Moore; Margaret J. Wertz; E. P. Dellinger
Acute alcohol (ETOH) intoxication as a risk factor for infection in trauma victims to our knowledge has not been previously reported. To determine if ETOH intoxication increases infection risk we examined data from 365 patients with penetrating abdominal trauma who were enrolled in a multi-center antibiotic study. Ninety-four patients sustained an injury to a hollow viscus. To separate acute from chronic ETOH effects, infections were divided into two categories: (1) trauma related; infections caused by bacterial contamination at the time of injury, while blood alcohol level (BAL) was elevated. (2) nosocomial; infections caused by bacteria acquired during hospital stay, after BAL had normalized. A BAL > or = 200 mg/dL was associated with a 2.6-fold increase in trauma-related infections. There was no association between BAL and subsequent nosocomial infection. Since infection rates for intoxicated patients were not higher after BAL had normalized, acute rather than chronic effects of ETOH appear to be responsible.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1986
Susan Adams; E. Patchen Dellinger; Margaret J. Wertz; Michael R. Oreskovich; David Simonowitz; Kaj Johansen
Archives of Surgery | 1983
Richard W. Pine; Margaret J. Wertz; E. Stan Lennard; E. Patchen Dellinger; C. James Carrico; Barbara H. Minshew
Archives of Surgery | 1988
E. Patchen Dellinger; Stephen D. Miller; Margaret J. Wertz; Martin Grypma; Beth M. Droppert; Paul A. Anderson
Archives of Surgery | 1985
E. Patchen Dellinger; Margaret J. Wertz; Jonathan L. Meakins; Joseph S. Solomkin; Maria D. Allo; Richard J. Howard; Richard L. Simmons
Archives of Surgery | 1988
E. Patchen Dellinger; Ellis S. Caplan; Lance D. Weaver; Margaret J. Wertz; Beth M. Droppert; Nancy J. Hoyt; Robert J. Brumback; Andrew R. Burgess; Attila Poka; Stephen K. Benirschke; E. Stan Lennard; Mary Ann Lou
Archives of Surgery | 1984
E. Patchen Dellinger; Michael R. Oreskovich; Margaret J. Wertz; Victor Hamasaki; E. Stan Lennard
Archives of Surgery | 1986
E. Patchen Dellinger; Margaret J. Wertz; E. Stan Lennard; Michael R. Oreskovich
Archives of Surgery | 1982
Michael R. Oreskovich; E. Patchen Dellinger; E. Stan Lennard; Margaret J. Wertz; C. James Carrico; Barbara H. Minshew