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Describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery

Objective- This study aims to identify the microorganisms and antibiotic resistance patterns in necrotising fasciitis. Methods- This is a retrospective audit over two consecutive years (June 2015 - July 2017) of all patients who had surgery for necrotising fasciitis at an ACS unit. Results- Necrotis...

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Main Author: Mabogoane, Tumiso B M
Other Authors: Rayamajhi Shreya
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mabogoane, Tumiso B M
author2 Rayamajhi Shreya
author_browse Mabogoane, Tumiso B M
Rayamajhi Shreya
author_facet Rayamajhi Shreya
Mabogoane, Tumiso B M
author_sort Mabogoane, Tumiso B M
collection Thesis
description Objective- This study aims to identify the microorganisms and antibiotic resistance patterns in necrotising fasciitis. Methods- This is a retrospective audit over two consecutive years (June 2015 - July 2017) of all patients who had surgery for necrotising fasciitis at an ACS unit. Results- Necrotising fasciitis accounted for 15% of all skin and soft tissue sepsis that required surgery. There were 10 male (52.6%) and nine female (47.4%) patients. The most common co-morbidity was diabetes mellitus in 10 (52.6%) patients, the compliance and control were monitored by glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1C) in 50% of the diabetic group, with a mean of 8.98 (Range 5-12.9). Fifteen percent of cases (n=3) had a confirmed diagnosis of HIV, with a negative result in eight (42%). ICU was required in three patients two of whom were on inotropes and one patient required renal replacement therapy. Surgery was performed within 24 hours for 11 (57%) patients. The most common anatomical site for debridement was perineum in nine patients (47%). Monomicrobial infection was the most common subtype of necrotising fasciitis withmethicillin sensitive staphylococcus aureus in five (26%) as the predominant microbe. Gram-negative organism Escherichia-coli was the second most common monomicrobial infection. All Gram-positive organisms were sensitive to cloxacillin and co- amoxiclavulanic acid. Two gram negatives(15%) of the 13 organisms cultured were resistant to coamoxiclavulanic acid. The 30 day mortality was 15%. Conclusion- Necrotising fasciitis is a rare but lethal infection.In our limited series, monomicrobial infection is the most common subtype. 15% of the community acquired organisms were resistant to the empiric antibiotic of choice co-amoxiclavulanic acid. (word count= 261).
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:01.081Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Division of General Surgery
publisherStr Division of General Surgery
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35812 Describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery Mabogoane, Tumiso B M Rayamajhi Shreya Kloppers, Jacobus acute care surgery Objective- This study aims to identify the microorganisms and antibiotic resistance patterns in necrotising fasciitis. Methods- This is a retrospective audit over two consecutive years (June 2015 - July 2017) of all patients who had surgery for necrotising fasciitis at an ACS unit. Results- Necrotising fasciitis accounted for 15% of all skin and soft tissue sepsis that required surgery. There were 10 male (52.6%) and nine female (47.4%) patients. The most common co-morbidity was diabetes mellitus in 10 (52.6%) patients, the compliance and control were monitored by glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1C) in 50% of the diabetic group, with a mean of 8.98 (Range 5-12.9). Fifteen percent of cases (n=3) had a confirmed diagnosis of HIV, with a negative result in eight (42%). ICU was required in three patients two of whom were on inotropes and one patient required renal replacement therapy. Surgery was performed within 24 hours for 11 (57%) patients. The most common anatomical site for debridement was perineum in nine patients (47%). Monomicrobial infection was the most common subtype of necrotising fasciitis withmethicillin sensitive staphylococcus aureus in five (26%) as the predominant microbe. Gram-negative organism Escherichia-coli was the second most common monomicrobial infection. All Gram-positive organisms were sensitive to cloxacillin and co- amoxiclavulanic acid. Two gram negatives(15%) of the 13 organisms cultured were resistant to coamoxiclavulanic acid. The 30 day mortality was 15%. Conclusion- Necrotising fasciitis is a rare but lethal infection.In our limited series, monomicrobial infection is the most common subtype. 15% of the community acquired organisms were resistant to the empiric antibiotic of choice co-amoxiclavulanic acid. (word count= 261). 2022-02-22T06:38:16Z 2022-02-22T06:38:16Z 2021 2022-02-22T06:37:38Z Master Thesis Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35812 eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle acute care surgery
Mabogoane, Tumiso B M
Describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery
title_full Describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery
title_fullStr Describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery
title_full_unstemmed Describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery
title_short Describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery
title_sort describing the resistance patterns of necrotising fasciitis in acute care surgery
topic acute care surgery
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35812
work_keys_str_mv AT mabogoanetumisobm describingtheresistancepatternsofnecrotisingfasciitisinacutecaresurgery