sultamicillin and Mediastinitis

sultamicillin has been researched along with Mediastinitis* in 2 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for sultamicillin and Mediastinitis

ArticleYear
Acinetobacter baumannii mediastinitis after cardiopulmonary bypass: case report and literature review.
    Surgical infections, 2008, Volume: 9, Issue:2

    Mediastinitis resulting from surgical site infection may occur in 1% of patients undergoing median sternotomy.. Case report and review of the pertinent English-language literature.. We report a case of mediastinitis caused by Acinetobacter baumannii, in a patient with multiple comorbidities who underwent cardiopulmonary bypass. Successful treatment consisted of surgical debridement, reconstruction, and ampicillin-sulbactam.. Acinetobacter baumannii should be recognized as a potential causative agent of severe postoperative mediastinitis.

    Topics: Acinetobacter baumannii; Acinetobacter Infections; Ampicillin; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Cardiopulmonary Bypass; Cross Infection; Debridement; Female; Humans; Mediastinitis; Middle Aged; Sulbactam; Surgical Wound Infection

2008

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for sultamicillin and Mediastinitis

ArticleYear
[Critical odontogenic infection involving the mediastinum. Case report].
    Mund-, Kiefer- und Gesichtschirurgie : MKG, 2005, Volume: 9, Issue:4

    Occasionally, trivial odontogenic infections may develop into complex diseases. This may even result in an unrestrained phlegmonous spread causing life-threatening complications. These problems have decreased since the introduction of antibiotics and also due to improved oral hygiene and improved diagnostic measures resulting in optimized medical treatment. However, life-threatening forms are still seen, in particular if infections spread along the cervical fascial sheaths down towards to the mediastinum. Over the past decade the number of critical infections has increased in other medical specialties. This is usually explained by the development of multiresistant pathogens in the context of nosocomial infections.. We reviewed the patients' records of the past 15 years at the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery of the University Hospital Kiel to assess a possible increase of odontogenic infections with life-threatening complications. From 1990 to 2004, four patients with odontogenic infections exhibiting critical phlegmonous spread were treated in the intensive care unit. Two patients developed bacterial mediastinitis which could be controlled by intravenous antibiotics only. One patient progressed to general septic mediastinitis and eventually died of cardiorespiratory arrest. The last patient also had septic mediastinitis and developed right pleural empyema. Several operations were necessary before the disease could be controlled. This patient's case report is presented in detail.. The prognosis of patients with mediastinitis crucially depends on (a) early diagnosis including computed tomography of the neck and thorax, (b) early radical surgical intervention, and (c) optimized pathogen-oriented antibiotic treatment.

    Topics: Abscess; Ampicillin; Cefotaxime; Cellulitis; Combined Modality Therapy; Critical Care; Disease Progression; Empyema, Pleural; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Male; Mediastinitis; Middle Aged; Neck; Reoperation; Shock, Septic; Staphylococcal Infections; Staphylococcus epidermidis; Streptococcal Infections; Sulbactam; Therapeutic Irrigation; Thoracotomy; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Vancomycin

2005