Determinants of death in patients with intraabdominal abscess.

  • 1 October 1980
    • journal article
    • Vol. 88 (4), 517-23
Abstract
To better define determinants of death in patients with intraabdominal abscess, 143 patients from a 5-year hospital experience were reviewed. Abscesses were most commonly results of trauma, spontaneous gastrointestinal perforations, and technical errors. Clinical presentation of abscess was quite variable as were criteria to justify reoperation for drainage. Abscesses occurred most commonly in the subphrenic space, pelvis, or subhepatic space. Complete abdominal exploration was employed most frequently for drainage. Those factors that were associated with a fatal outcome were: organ failure (P < 0.001), lesser sac abscess (P < 0.001), positive blood culture (P < 0.01), recurrent and/or persistent abscess (P < 0.01), multiple abscesses (P pE 0.01), age > 50 years (P < 0.03), and subhepatic abscess (P < 0.03). These data suggest that deaths from abdominal abscess are consequences of ineffective surgical drainage and failure of host defense mechanisms.