AI Article Synopsis

  • This study looked at patients who had a special kind of medical procedure called transabdominal lymphatic-interventions to see if they had any infections or inflammatory reactions after the procedure.
  • A total of 63 procedures were done on 60 patients, and they monitored symptoms and lab results to understand how the patients were doing.
  • The researchers found that serious infections were rare, and while some patients had higher white blood cell counts and CRP levels after the procedure, these levels returned to normal within 10 to 15 days.

Article Abstract

The purpose of this retrospective study was to evaluate the occurrence of infectious complications and inflammatory reactions after transabdominal lymphatic-interventions. 63 lymphatic-interventions were performed in 60 patients (male/female: 35/25; mean age 56 [9-85] years) [chylothorax n = 48, chylous ascites n = 7, combined chylothorax/chylous ascites n = 5]. Post-interventional clinical course and laboratory findings were analyzed in the whole cohort as well as subgroups without (group A; n = 35) and with peri-interventional antibiotics (group B; n = 25) (pneumonia n = 16, drainage-catheter inflammation n = 5, colitis n = 1, cystitis n = 1, transcolonic-access n = 2). No septic complications associated with the intervention occurred. Leucocytes increased significantly, peaking on post-interventional day-1 (8.6 ± 3.9 × 10 cells/mL vs. 9.8 ± 4.7 × 10 cells/mL; p = 0.009) and decreased thereafter (day-10: 7.3 ± 2.7 × 10 cells/mL, p = 0.005). CRP-values were pathological in 89.5% of patients already at baseline (40.1 ± 63.9 mg/L) and increased significant on day-3 (77.0 ± 78.8 mg/L, p < 0.001). Values decreased thereafter (day-15: 25.3 ± 34.4 mg/L, p = 0.04). In subgroup B, 13/25 patients had febrile episodes post-interventionally (pneumonia n = 11, cystitis n = 1, drainage-catheter inflammation n = 1). One patient developed biliary peritonitis despite continued antibiotics and underwent cholecystectomy. Baseline leucocytes and CRP-levels were higher in group B than A, but with comparable post-interventional profiles. Clinically relevant infectious complications associated with transabdominal lymphatic-interventions are rare irrespective of peri-interventional antibiotic use. Post-interventional elevation of leucocytes and CRP are observed with normalization over 10-15 days.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10582110PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-42197-9DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

infectious complications
8
post-interventional infectious
4
complications percutaneous
4
percutaneous transabdominal
4
transabdominal lymphatic
4
lymphatic interventions
4
interventions observational
4
observational study
4
study purpose
4
purpose retrospective
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!