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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Metronidazole and Augmentin in the prevention of sepsis after appendicectomy.

Two hundred and fifty patients were admitted to a prospective randomized trial to compare the efficacy of Augmentin with metronidazole in the prevention of sepsis after appendicectomy. Pre-operatively they received either 500 mg metronidazole or 1.2g Augmentin intravenously. Those patients with gangrenous or perforated appendices received eight additional doses of the trial drug at 8 hourly intervals. Overall there were 13 wound infections in the Augmentin group (11 per cent) and 21 in the metronidazole group (18 per cent). The 90 per cent confidence limits for the overall 7 per cent difference in infection rates were +/- 8.5 per cent. There were high rates of wound infection in the gangrenous group (Augmentin 8 per cent versus metronidazole 19 per cent) and especially in the perforated group (Augmentin 33 per cent versus metronidazole 63 per cent). There was no statistically significant difference between the infection rates with the two antibiotics but our study suggests that Augmentin, which is active against both aerobes and anaerobes, may be more effective than metronidazole in reducing wound sepsis after appendicectomy.[1]

References

  1. Metronidazole and Augmentin in the prevention of sepsis after appendicectomy. Drumm, J., Donovan, I.A., Wise, R., Lowe, P. The British journal of surgery. (1985) [Pubmed]
 
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