Re: Prophy ABX for Elective C/S was Re: No Posts!

From: Larry Glazerman (l.glazerman@rcn.com)
Thu Nov 29 18:36:36 2007


I think it's important that we realize we're talking about two different things here, both with different guidelines:

1. GBS prophylaxis 2. Surgical prophylaxis for cesarean section.

I don't do OB anymore, but I wonder if a gram of Ancef before incision will prevent GBS sepsis in the newborn. Clearly, those who give the Ancef after cord clamping won't effect GBS in the neonate.

--
Larry R. Glazerman MD
St. Luke's Center for Advanced Gynecologic Care
250 Cetronia Road Suite 305
Allentown PA 18104
glazerl@slhn.org

On Nov 29, 2007, at 3:12 PM, Andrew Folley wrote:

> Dan > the problem is that antibiotic prophylaxis is a recommended > guideline from ACOG sine 2004. > We use one dose one time of Ancef 2 grams although one is sufficient > for women less than 200 pounds and procedure less than 1 hour. We > give it 15 minutes to 1 hour prio to c-section incision. > > > Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2007 01:34:55 -0600 > > From: el@lisse.NA > > To: ob-gyn-l@dns.obgyn.net > > Subject: Re: Prophy ABX for Elective C/S was Re: No Posts! > > > > Unless my memory fails me, this has been discussed ad nauseam here > > and Cochrane unequivocally states that a one shot intra-operative > > prophylaxis reduces infection rates, bothe for emergencies (ie C/S) > > and (supposedly) clean operationes (TAH). > > > > And, if I am not mistaken low income (:-)-O) Antibiotics do as well > > as expensive ones. Our ICU honcho suggested Augmentin and if that's > > not available (in the Public Hospital) Ampicillin. Works very well > > for me. > > > > el > > > > on 11/29/07 3:05 AM R. Daniel Braun said the following: > > > What is your infection rate on elective sections who don't get > > > antibiotics? If it is less than 5%, giving prophylactic > antibiotics is > > > probably not justified. > > > In a healthy upper S-E population, and with a surgeon who > handles tissue > > > gently and hardly ever takes more than 25 minutes, less than 5% > > > puerperal morbidity should be expected without antibiotics. > > > > > > Dan > > > > > > On Nov 28, 2007 5:10 PM, Andrew Folley <agfolley@hotmail.com > > > <mailto:agfolley@hotmail.com>> wrote: > > > > > > No we do not. My understanding is it is not necessary. However we > > > are doing surgical antibiotic prophylaxis on all c-sections > elective > > > and emergency. agf > > > > > > <http://www.windowslive.com/connect.html?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_Wave2_newways_112007 > > > > > > > > -- > > > R. Daniel Braun, MD FACOG(L) CMT > > > Professor Emeritus > > > Dept. of Obstetrics and Gynecology > > > Indiana U. School of Medicine > > > > > > R. Daniel Braun > > > > > > "Science without Religion is LAME; Religion without Science is > BLIND" > > > Einstein 1941 > > > > -- > > Dr. Eberhard W. Lisse \ / Obstetrician & Gynaecologist (Saar) > > el@lisse.NA el108-ARIN / * | Telephone: +264 81 124 6733 (cell) > > PO Box 8421 \ / Please do NOT email to this address > > Bachbrecht, Namibia ;____/ if it is DNS related in ANY way > > Get the power of Windows + Web with the new Windows Live. Power up!





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