Bacterial Translocation as a Cause of Postoperative Sepsis in Surgical Patients Undergoing Laparotomy

Authors

  • Neeraj Thapa Lumbini Medical College image/svg+xml
  • Bhairav Kumar Hamal Shree Birendra Chhauni Hospital
  • Nagendra Prashad Yadav Janakpur Zonal Hospital
  • Ghanashyam Thapa NAMS, Bir Hospital

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22502/jlmc.v2i2.53

Keywords:

bacteria, laparotomy, postoperative, sepsis, translocation

Abstract

Introduction: Bacterial translocation is the invasion of indigenous intestinal bacteria through the gut mucosa to normally sterile tissues and the internal organs. Objective of the study is to examine the spectrum of bacteria involved in translocation in surgical patients undergoing laparotomy and to determine the relation between nodal migration of bacteria and the development of postoperative septic complications.

Methods: Mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN)
culture was done in patients undergoing elective and emergency surgeries fulfilling the inclusion criteria.

Results:
Bacterial translocation was identified in 22 (44.8%) patients. The most common organism identified was Escherichia coli (n=11, 50%). Both enteric bacteria, typical of indigenous intestinal flora, and non-enteric bacteria were isolated. Postoperative septic complications developed in four (11%) patients. Septic morbidity was more frequent when a greater diversity of bacteria resided within the mesenteric lymph nodes.

Conclusion: Bacterial translocation is associated with an increase in the development of postoperative sepsis in surgical patients. The organisms responsible for septic morbidity are similar in spectrum to those observed in the mesenteric lymph nodes. These data strongly support the gut origin hypothesis of sepsis in humans. Besides, there is increased bacterial translocation in patients undergoing emergency procedures.

Keywords: bacteria • laparotomy • postoperative • sepsis • translocation

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

  • Neeraj Thapa, Lumbini Medical College

    Lecturer

    Department of General Surgery

  • Bhairav Kumar Hamal, Shree Birendra Chhauni Hospital

    Professor and Head

    Department of Surgery

  • Nagendra Prashad Yadav, Janakpur Zonal Hospital

    Surgeon

  • Ghanashyam Thapa, NAMS, Bir Hospital

    Assistant Professor

    Department of Surgery

Downloads

Published

2014-12-30

Issue

Section

Original Research Article

How to Cite

1.
Bacterial Translocation as a Cause of Postoperative Sepsis in Surgical Patients Undergoing Laparotomy. J Lumbini Med Coll [Internet]. 2014 Dec. 30 [cited 2026 Apr. 16];2(2):28-30. Available from: https://jlmc.edu.np/index.php/JLMC/article/view/53

Most read articles by the same author(s)