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Oxygen limits infections from surgery.


Of all the recent advances in surgery, some of the simplest are among the most valuable. For instance, scientists discovered 4 years ago that just keeping a patient warm during and after surgery reduces infections. A year later, other researchers found that this precaution also saves lives (SN: 4/12/97, p. 220).

Researchers now report that giving a patient extra oxygen during and after surgery halves the occurrence of postsurgical infection, a dangerous complication.

"We're trying to evaluate simple, inexpensive, easy things that might make a big difference in how patients do [during and after surgery]," says Daniel I. Sessler, an anesthesiologist Anesthesiologist
A medical specialist who administers an anesthetic to a patient before he is treated.

Mentioned in: Anesthesia, General, Appendectomy, Parathyroidectomy

anesthesiologist
 at the University of California, San Francisco Coordinates:  .

Between 1996 and 1998, Sessler and his colleagues studied 500 patients, average age 57, in Vienna, Austria, and Hamburg Hamburg, city, Germany
Hamburg (häm`brkh), officially Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg (Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg), city (1994 pop.
, Germany. Each patient underwent colon or rectal surgery for cancer, inflammatory bowel disease inflammatory bowel disease
n. Abbr. IBD
Any of several incurable and debilitating diseases of the gastrointestinal tract characterized by inflammation and obstruction of parts of the intestine.
, or another illness. Of these, 250 patients received a standard 30-percent-oxygen mixture while under anesthesia in surgery and for 2 hours afterward. The others received an 80-percent-oxygen mix. Normal air is about 21 percent oxygen, but anesthetized a·nes·the·tize also a·naes·the·tize  
tr.v. a·nes·the·tized, a·nes·the·tiz·ing, a·nes·the·tiz·es
To induce anesthesia in.



a·nes
 patients breathe easier with slightly more oxygen.

During the first week or so of recovery, 28 patients who had received the 30-percent-oxygen mix developed infections around their sutures, but only 13 of those with the higher oxygen dose had that problem. Patients in both groups received the same anesthesia and antibiotics during surgery, the scientists report in the Jan. 20 NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE The New England Journal of Medicine (New Engl J Med or NEJM) is an English-language peer-reviewed medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world. . The surgeons didn't know which patients received the higher oxygen dose.

Close examination of tissue samples from some of the patients in each group indicated that blood in individuals getting the higher oxygen dose was delivering more oxygen to cells. This enables immune cells called neutrophils neutrophils (ner·ō·trōˑ·filz),
n.pl white blood cells with cytoplasmic granules that consume harmful bacteria, fungi, and other foreign materials.
 to capture and destroy bacteria more efficiently, thwarting infection, Sessler says. Last year, the researchers reported that extra oxygen during surgery reduces nausea and vomiting Nausea and Vomiting Definition

Nausea is the sensation of being about to vomit. Vomiting, or emesis, is the expelling of undigested food through the mouth.
 afterward.

The work "is very interesting," says Michael E. Rogers, a medicinal chemist at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences The U.S. National Institute of General Medical Sciences is one of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the principal biomedical research agency of the Federal Government.  in Bethesda, Md. It provides "a really nice, practical outcome that's useful in the clinical setting," he says.

In the new study, the researchers had planned to enroll 1,000 patients but ended the trial after data on the first 500 patients indicated a strong benefit from the increased oxygen.

"That's not uncommon," Rogers says. "If the effect is so significant, you don't want to withhold that treatment from people who might benefit from it."

The extra oxygen, which costs pennies per patient, will translate well to other surgeries, Sessler says. However, the effect may show up more in colorectal surgery, which has a high infection rate. Unless a patient has a specific condition that precludes it, Sessler says, "I can't think of any reason why [physicians] wouldn't provide supplemental oxygen" during surgery.
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Article Details
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Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 22, 2000
Words:469
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