World journal of surgery
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World journal of surgery · Jan 2000
Relaparotomy in peritonitis: prognosis and treatment of patients with persisting intraabdominal infection.
Some patients are prone to persisting intraabdominal infection regardless of initial eradication of the source of infection. Our aim was to characterize patients who had to undergo relaparotomy for persisting abdominal sepsis using simple clinical parameters and to define those patients who are susceptible to benefit of aggressive surgical treatment by early and repeated reoperations to control multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) caused by ongoing intraabdominal infection. Persisting abdominal sepsis was the cause of death in all of our patients who had to undergo relaparotomy. ⋯ Our data show that timely relaparotomy provides the only surgical option that significantly improves outcome. However, aggressive surgical treatment has reached its limit in patients whose source of infection could not be controlled at the initial operation. To improve overall survival the decision to perform a relaparotomy on demand after an initially successful eradication of the source of infection must be made within 48 hr, at least before MODS emerges.