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What does elective surgery mean? Preparation for emergency surgery, necessary measures. Elective surgery: care for the convalescent

A surgical operation is a surgical intervention on human tissues and organs, which is performed for therapeutic or diagnostic purposes. In this case, a violation of their anatomical integrity inevitably occurs. Modern medicine offers many types of operations, including those with the most delicate effects and low risks of complications.

Types of surgical interventions

There are several classifications that define the types of surgical operations. First of all, they are divided into therapeutic and diagnostic interventions. During the diagnostic process, the following manipulations can be performed:

There is a division of operations according to urgency:

  1. In the first place is urgent or emergency surgery. More often we are talking about saving the patient’s life, since delay can lead to death. Perform immediately upon admission of the patient to a medical institution, no later than 4 hours.
  2. Then there are urgent operations, which are prescribed for urgent conditions. Urgent operations are performed within 1-2 days.
  3. There is delayed surgical intervention, when conservative treatment eliminates the acute manifestation of the disease and doctors prescribe surgery at a later date. This allows you to better prepare the patient for the upcoming manipulation.
  4. Elective surgery is performed when the disease does not threaten the patient’s life.

In surgery, several methods of intervention are used: radical, in which the main disease process is eliminated, and palliative, also auxiliary, which is carried out to alleviate the patient’s condition. Symptomatic operations are carried out aimed at relieving one of the signs of the disease. The operational process can include either 1-2 stages or be multi-stage.

Modern medicine, including surgery, has made great strides forward, and today doctors have the opportunity to perform quite complex operations. For example, combined interventions, when manipulations are simultaneously performed on two or more organs at once, relieving the patient of several ailments.

Often combined operations are performed, in which it is possible to perform the procedure on several organs, but the goal is to cure one disease. Surgical operations are divided according to the degree of possible contamination:

  1. Clean (aseptic) intervention. They are performed as planned, without preliminary opening of the lumens.
  2. Conditionally aseptic. The cavities are opened, but the contents do not penetrate into the resulting wound.
  3. Conditionally infected. During manipulation, the contents of the intestine flow into other cavities and tissues, or we are talking about dissection of acutely inflamed tissues that do not contain purulent exudate.
  4. Infected manipulations. Doctors know about the presence of purulent inflammation.

Preparatory activities

Any procedure requires mandatory preparation. The duration of preparatory measures depends on many factors: the urgency of the operation, the severity of the condition, the presence of complications, etc. The anesthesiologist is obliged to advise the patient about the prescribed anesthesia, and the operating surgeon is obliged to advise the patient about the upcoming surgical intervention. All nuances must be clarified and recommendations given.

The patient should be examined by other specialized specialists who assess the state of his health and adjust the therapy, give advice on nutrition, lifestyle changes and other issues. Basic preoperative preparation includes the following tests and procedures:

  • general urine and blood tests;
  • electrocardiography;
  • coagulogram (blood test for clotting).

Operating periods

There are several stages of surgical operations, each of which is important for the successful course of the entire event. The period from the moment the patient enters the operating room until he is removed from anesthesia is called intraoperative. It consists of several stages:

During surgery there is a team: a surgeon (if required, assistants), a nurse, an anesthesiologist, a nurse anesthetist, and a nurse. There are 3 operational stages:

  1. Stage I - operational access is created. A tissue incision is made, during which the doctor achieves convenient and minimally traumatic access.
  2. Stage II - direct intervention is performed. The impact can be of a very different nature: trepanation (a hole in the bone tissue), incision (an incision in soft tissue), ectomy (part or all of an organ is removed), amputation (truncation of a part of an organ), etc.
  3. Stage III is the final stage. At this stage, the operating surgeon sutured the wound layer by layer. If an anaerobic infection is diagnosed, this procedure is not performed.

An important measure during the intraoperative period is asepsis. To prevent infection from entering the body, modern surgery includes the administration of antibiotics to the patient.

Possible negative consequences

Despite the fact that modern surgery is at a fairly high level, doctors often have to deal with a number of negative phenomena. The following complications may occur after surgery:


Doctors, knowing the possibility of postoperative complications, are attentive to preventive measures and in most cases prevent the development of dangerous conditions.

In addition, a patient entering for a planned operation must undergo all the necessary examinations and undergo a series of tests that provide a complete clinical picture of his health: blood clotting, the functioning of the heart muscle, the condition of the blood vessels, and reveal the presence of various kinds of diseases not related to the upcoming operation.

If diagnostics reveals any abnormalities and pathological conditions, then timely measures are taken to eliminate them. Of course, the risks of complications are higher during emergency and urgent operations, in which specialists do not have time to thoroughly diagnose the patient, because we are talking about saving lives.

Postoperative therapy

- another important period for the patient. Rehabilitation measures can pursue several goals:


Some patients believe that it is enough to eat well and get plenty of rest so that the body can recover after surgery. However, the importance of rehabilitation measures should not be underestimated, since their absence can nullify all the efforts of the surgeon.

If earlier in rehabilitation therapy the prevailing tactic was to provide the patient with complete rest during the postoperative period, today it has been proven that this method does not justify itself. It is important to properly organize rehabilitation; much attention is paid to a positive psychological environment that does not allow patients to mope and fall into a depressive state. If the process takes place at home, then the mandatory participation of family and friends is required so that the person strives for a speedy recovery.

The duration of the recovery period depends on the nature of the surgical intervention. For example, after spinal surgery, rehabilitation can take from 3 months to several years. And with extensive manipulations inside the peritoneum, a person will have to follow a number of rules for more than one year.

Recovery requires an integrated approach, and a specialist can prescribe several procedures and measures:

MAIN TYPES OF SURGICAL OPERATIONS

Operation - performing special mechanical effects on organs or tissues for therapeutic or diagnostic purposes.

Classification of surgical operations

Surgical operations are usually divided according to the urgency of their implementation and the possibility of complete cure or alleviation of the patient’s condition.

According to the urgency of implementation, they are distinguished:

1) emergency operations, they are performed immediately or within the next few hours from the moment the patient is admitted to the surgical department;

2) urgent operations are performed within the next few days after admission;

3) planned operations, they are performed as planned (the timing of their implementation is not limited).

There are radical and palliative operations.

Radicalconsider an operation in which, by removing a pathological formation, part or all of an organ, the return of the disease is excluded. The volume of surgical intervention, which determines its radicalism, is determined by the nature of the pathological process. For benign tumors (fibromas, lipomas, neuromas, polyps, etc.), their removal leads to a cure for the patient. In case of malignant tumors, radical intervention is not always achieved by removing part or all of the organ, taking into account the possibility of tumor metastasis. Therefore, radical oncological operations often, along with organ removal, include removal (or resection) of neighboring organs and regional lymph nodes. Thus, the radicalism of surgery for breast cancer is achieved by removing not only the entire mammary gland, but also the pectoralis major and minor muscles, fatty tissue, along with the lymph nodes of the axillary and subclavian regions. In inflammatory diseases, the volume of intervention is determined

making the operation radical, it is limited to the removal of pathologically changed tissues: for example, they perform osteonecrectomy for chronic osteomyelitis or removal of a pathologically changed organ - appendectomy, cholecystectomy, etc.

Palliativeare operations performed to eliminate an immediate danger to the patient’s life or alleviate his condition. Thus, in case of disintegration and bleeding from a stomach tumor with metastases, when radical surgery is impossible due to the prevalence of the process, gastrectomy or wedge-shaped excision of the stomach with a tumor and a bleeding vessel is performed to save life. In case of a widespread neoplasm of the esophagus with metastases, when the tumor completely obstructs the lumen of the esophagus and it becomes impassable for food and even water, in order to prevent starvation, a palliative operation is performed - a fistula is placed on the stomach (gastrostomy), through which food is introduced into it. Palliative operations achieve stopping bleeding or the possibility of nutrition, but the disease itself is not eliminated, since tumor metastases or the tumor itself remain. For inflammatory or other diseases, palliative operations are also performed. For example, with paraosseous phlegmon complicating osteomyelitis, the phlegmon is opened, the wound is drained to eliminate intoxication, prevent the development of a general purulent infection, but the main focus of inflammation in the bone remains. In case of acute purulent cholecystitis in the elderly and people suffering from heart failure, the risk of radical surgery is high. To prevent the development of purulent peritonitis and severe intoxication, a palliative operation is performed - cholecystostomy: the application of a fistula to the gallbladder. Palliative operations can play the role of a certain stage in the treatment of patients, as in the examples given (opening of phlegmon in osteomyelitis or cholecystostomy in acute cholecystitis). Subsequently, when the general condition of the patient improves or local favorable conditions are created, a radical operation can be performed. In case of inoperable oncological diseases, when radical intervention is impossible due to the prevalence of the process, palliative surgery is the only benefit that can temporarily alleviate the patient’s condition.

Operations can be single-stage or multi-stage (two- or three-stage). At one-time All stages of the operation are carried out directly one after another without a break in time. Each of multi-moment operations consists of certain stages of chemical

surgical treatment of the patient, separated in time. As an example, we can cite multi-stage operations in orthopedics or oncology practice. For example, with a tumor of the colon that has caused intestinal obstruction, an anastomosis is first applied between the afferent and efferent loops of the intestine or a fistula on the afferent loop (1st stage), and then, after the patient’s condition improves, a resection of the intestine along with the tumor is performed (2nd stage) stage).

In modern conditions, with the development of pain management and intensive care, it has become possible to simultaneously perform two or more operations on a patient - simultaneous(simultaneous) operations. For example, in a patient with an inguinal hernia and varicose veins of the great saphenous vein, two operations can be performed in one step: hernia repair and phlebectomy. In a patient with a gastric ulcer and chronic calculous cholecystitis, gastric resection and cholecystectomy, if the patient is in good condition, can be performed simultaneously using one surgical approach.

In surgical practice, situations are possible when the question of the possibility of performing an operation is decided only during the surgical intervention itself. This applies to oncological diseases: if a tumor of one or another organ is diagnosed, a radical operation is assumed; During the intervention, it turns out that the planned operation is impossible due to metastasis of the tumor to distant organs or germination into neighboring ones. This operation is called trial

Currently to diagnostic operations are rarely used due to the availability of highly informative diagnostic research methods. Nevertheless, there may be cases when surgery remains the last resort for establishing a diagnosis. If the diagnosis is confirmed, such an operation usually ends as a curative operation. Diagnostic operations include biopsy: taking a formation, organ or part thereof for histological examination. This diagnostic method plays an important role in the differential diagnosis between benign and malignant neoplasms, tumor and inflammatory processes, etc. Such studies help clarify the indications for surgery or select an adequate volume, as, for example, in case of cancer or gastric ulcer: in the first case, gastrectomy (removal of the entire stomach), in the second - gastrectomy (removal of part of it).

There are typical (standard) and atypical operations. Typical operations are performed according to clearly developed schemes and methods

surgical intervention. Atypical situations arise in the case of an unusual nature of the pathological process, which necessitates the need for surgical treatment. These include severe traumatic injuries, especially combined injuries, gunshot wounds. In these cases, operations may go beyond standard ones and require creative decisions from the surgeon when determining the volume of the operation, performing plastic elements, and performing simultaneous interventions on several organs: vessels, hollow organs, bones, joints, etc.

There are closed and open operations. TO closed include repositioning of bone fragments, some types of special operations (endoscopic), turning the fetus onto its stem in obstetrics, etc.

With the development of surgical technology, a number of special operations emerged.

Microsurgical operations are performed under magnification from 3 to 40 times using magnifying glasses or an operative microscope. In this case, special microsurgical instruments and the finest suture threads are used. Microsurgical operations are increasingly being introduced into the practice of vascular surgery and neurosurgery. With their help, replantation of limbs and fingers after traumatic amputation is successfully performed.

Endoscopic operations are carried out using endoscopic devices. Through an endoscope, polyps of the stomach, intestines, and bladder are removed, and bleeding from the mucous membrane of these organs is stopped by coagulating the bleeding vessel with a laser beam or closing its lumen with special glue. With the help of endoscopes, stones are removed from the bile ducts, bladder, foreign bodies from the bronchi, and esophagus.

Using endoscopic devices and television equipment, laparoscopic and thoracoscopic operations are performed (cholecystectomy, appendectomy, suturing of perforated ulcers, resection of the stomach, lung, suturing of bullae in the lung for bullous disease, hernia repair, etc.). Such closed endoscopic operations have become the main ones for a number of diseases (for example, cholecystectomy, marginal lung resection) or are an alternative to open operations. Taking into account the indications and contraindications, this type of operation is increasingly used in surgery.

Endovascular operations - a type of closed intravascular surgical interventions performed under x-ray control: expansion of the narrowed part of the vessel using special

catheters, artificial occlusion (embolization) of a bleeding vessel, removal of atherosclerotic plaques, etc.

Repeatedoperations can be planned (multi-stage operations) and forced - with the development of postoperative complications, the treatment of which is possible only surgically (for example, relaparotomy in case of failure of the sutures of the intestinal anastomosis with the development of peritonitis).

Stages of surgery

The surgical operation consists of the following main stages:

Surgical access;

The main stage of the operation (surgical procedure);

Suturing the wound.

Surgical approach

The requirements for surgical access are minimal trauma, ensuring a good angle of surgical activity, as well as conditions for carefully performing the main stage of the operation. Good access determines minimal tissue traumatization by hooks, provides a good overview of the surgical field and thorough hemostasis. For all existing typical operations, appropriate surgical approaches have been developed; only for atypical operations (for example, with extensive tissue damage due to trauma, gunshot wounds) it is necessary to choose a surgical approach taking into account the requirements stated above.

Surgical appointment

The basic techniques for performing an operation, the technique of specific surgical interventions are outlined in the course of operative surgery, the end of the main stage of the operation (before suturing the wound) necessarily includes a thorough check of hemostasis - stopping bleeding, which is an important point in the prevention of secondary bleeding.

Suturing the wound

The final stage of the operation is suturing the wound. It must be carried out carefully to avoid cutting through the seams, untying

ligatures, divergence of the edges of the surgical wound. Significant difficulties with wound suturing arise during atypical operations, when it is necessary to close the wound with displaced flaps of tissue, skin, or free skin grafts.

When performing all stages of the operation, an indispensable condition is careful handling of fabrics, Rough compression of tissues with instruments, their overstretching, and tears are unacceptable. Careful hemostasis is extremely important. Compliance with the above conditions makes it possible to prevent the development of complications after surgery - secondary bleeding, purulent-inflammatory complications that arise from endo- and exogenous infection of wounds.

Preventing wound infections during the operation - an indispensable condition for its implementation. Preventive measures consist of following the rules of asepsis (see. Asepsis) and special measures during surgery. Ensuring that the operation is performed aseptically begins with the treatment of the surgical field, which is performed after the patient is put under anesthesia or before local anesthesia. After preliminary washing of the skin with ammonia solution or diethyl ether, the surgical field is treated according to Grossikh-Filonchikov or another method. Recently, self-adhesive sterile films have been used to close the surgical field after treatment (they are glued to the skin). The immediate surgical access site is isolated with sterile sheets for major operations or towels for minor ones. Sheets or towels are placed on the skin or on adhesive film. After this, the isolated area of ​​skin is treated with an alcohol solution of iodine and chlorhexidine.

In cases where there is a source of possible contamination of the wound (purulent, intestinal fistulas, gangrene of the limb), it is first isolated: sterile napkins are applied, the foot with gangrene is wrapped in a towel, and sometimes the fistula is sutured.

During the operation, each of its participants - assistants (assistants to the surgeon), operating nurse - must clearly know their responsibilities. The surgeon’s orders are unquestioningly carried out by all participants in the operation.

After surgical access, the edges and walls of the surgical wound are covered with napkins or a towel to prevent the possibility of accidental infection of the wound by contact or air.

To prevent airborne infection, unnecessary conversations between the participants in the operation and walking in the operating room are prohibited;

The use of a mask is mandatory not only for those directly involved in the operation, but also for everyone in the operating room.

Prevention of contact and implantation infection is achieved by mandatory change of instruments when they become dirty. There are main stages that require changing all instruments, surgical needles, needle holders, delimiting napkins, and towels. In particular, this is a transition from an infected stage of the operation (for example, suturing the intestine) to a less infected stage (application of a second row of serous sutures, suturing the wound). When working on an infected organ (removal of the appendix, gallbladder with purulent inflammation, opening of a hollow organ, such as the colon), it is necessary to first isolate the surrounding tissues with gauze wipes and take precautions to avoid contact of the inflamed organ with the wound, to prevent the ingress of contents organs, pus on surrounding tissues.

After completing the main stage of the operation, all the napkins with which the tissues were isolated are removed, the instruments are changed, the skin is treated with iodine solution, iodine + potassium iodide, and then sutures are placed on the wound. The surgical wound must be sutured so that there are no pockets or closed cavities left in it; the edges of the wound should be well aligned with each other. The sutures are tightened until the walls and edges of the wound come into contact with moderate tension. Insufficiently tightened sutures can lead to divergence of the edges of the wound, and tightly tightened sutures can lead to necrosis (death) of the edges and walls of the wound.

Various methods of wound suturing have been developed depending on the nature of the operation, the treatment of the patient in the postoperative period, the condition of the tissues and the presence of inflammatory changes:

1) suturing the wound tightly;

2) drainage of the cavity, wound;

3) application of temporary sutures, taking into account repeated interventions;

4) leaving the wound open.

PREOPERATIVE PERIOD

Preoperative period - time from the patient’s admission to the hospital to the start of the operation. Its duration varies and depends on the nature of the disease, the severity of the patient’s condition, and the urgency of the operation.

Basic tasks preoperative period: 1) establish a diagnosis; 2) determine the indications, urgency and nature of the operation;

tions; 3) prepare the patient for surgery. Main target preoperative preparation of the patient - to minimize the risk of the upcoming operation and the possibility of developing postoperative complications.

Having established the diagnosis of a surgical disease, the following basic steps should be performed in a certain sequence to prepare the patient for surgery:

1) determine the indications and urgency of the operation, find out contraindications;

2) conduct additional clinical, laboratory and diagnostic studies in order to determine the condition of vital organs and systems;

3) determine the degree of anesthesiological and surgical risk;

4) conduct psychological preparation of the patient for surgery;

5) carry out preparation of organs, correction of violations of homeostasis systems;

6) carry out prevention of endogenous infection;

7) choose a method of pain relief, administer premedication;

8) carry out preliminary preparation of the surgical field;

9) transport the patient to the operating room;

10) place the patient on the operating table.

Determining the urgency of the operation

The timing of the operation is determined by indications, which can be vital, absolute and relative.

Vital indications to surgery arise in diseases in which the slightest delay in surgery threatens the patient’s life. Such operations are performed on an emergency basis. Vital indications for surgery arise in the following pathological conditions.

Continued bleeding due to rupture of an internal organ (liver, spleen, kidney, fallopian tube during pregnancy), injury to large vessels, stomach and duodenal ulcers. In these cases, if the ongoing bleeding is not immediately stopped during surgery, it can quickly lead to the death of the patient.

Acute inflammatory diseases of the abdominal organs - acute appendicitis, strangulated hernia, acute intestinal obstruction, thromboembolism. These diseases are fraught with the development of purulent peritonitis or gangrene of the organ due to thromboembolism, which pose a danger to the patient’s life.

Purulent-inflammatory diseases - abscess, phlegmon, purulent mastitis, acute osteomyelitis, etc. In these cases, delaying surgery can lead to the development of a general purulent infection in patients - sepsis.

Absolute readings before surgery arise in diseases in which failure to perform the operation or a long delay can lead to a condition that threatens the patient’s life. These operations are performed urgently, a few days or weeks after the patient’s admission to the surgical department. Such diseases include malignant neoplasms, pyloric stenosis, obstructive jaundice, chronic lung abscess, etc. Long-term delay of surgery can lead to tumor metastases, general exhaustion, liver failure and other serious complications.

Relative readings surgery may be necessary for diseases that do not pose a threat to the patient’s life (hernia, varicose veins of the superficial veins of the lower extremities, benign tumors). These operations are performed as planned.

When determining the need for surgery, find out contraindications for its implementation: cardiac, respiratory and vascular failure (shock), myocardial infarction, stroke, hepatic-renal failure, thromboembolic disease, severe metabolic disorders (decompensation of diabetes mellitus, precomatose state, coma), severe anemia, severe cachexia. These changes in vital organs should be assessed individually, according to the volume and severity of the proposed operation. The patient’s condition is assessed jointly with relevant specialists (therapist, neurologist, endocrinologist). If there are relative indications for surgery and the presence of diseases that increase its risk, the intervention is postponed and appropriate specialists treat the diseases.

When performing an operation for life-saving reasons, when preoperative preparation is limited to several hours, the assessment of the patient’s condition and preparation for the operation is carried out jointly by the surgeon, anesthesiologist-resuscitator, and therapist. It is necessary to determine the extent of the operation, the method of pain relief, and the means for drug and transfusion therapy. The scope of the operation should be minimal, aimed at saving the patient’s life. For example, in a seriously ill patient with acute cholecystitis, surgery is limited to cholecystostomy; in a patient with acute intestinal obstruction caused by a tumor

leaking the colon, the operation consists of creating a colostomy (colon fistula), etc.

The choice of pain relief method in these patients should be strictly individual. Preference should be given to NLA.

For lung diseases and bronchial asthma, halothane anesthesia is indicated; for heart failure, some operations can be performed under local anesthesia.

Assessment of surgical and anesthetic risk

Surgery and anesthesia pose potential dangers to the patient. Therefore, an objective assessment of surgical and anesthetic risk is very important when determining the indications for surgery and choosing an anesthesia method. This allows you to reduce the risk of surgery due to adequate preoperative preparation, choosing a rational volume of surgical intervention and type of anesthesia. Typically, a score is used to assess the operational and anesthetic risk, which is carried out taking into account three factors: the general condition of the patient, the volume and nature of the operation, and the type of anesthesia.

I. Assessment of the patient’s general condition:

1) general satisfactory condition of a patient with localized surgical diseases in the absence of concomitant diseases and systemic disorders - 0.5 points;

2) moderate condition: patients with mild or moderate systemic disorders - 1 point;

3) severe condition: patients with severe systemic disorders associated with surgery or concomitant diseases - 2 points;

4) extremely severe condition: patients with extremely severe systemic disorders caused by a primary or concomitant disease that poses a threat to the patient’s life without surgical intervention or during its implementation - 4 points;

5) terminal condition: patients with decompensation of the functions of vital organs and systems that determine the likelihood of death during surgery and in the next few hours after it is performed - 6 points.

II. Assessment of the volume and nature of the operation:

1) operations on the body surface and minor purulent operations - 0.5 points;

2) more complex operations on the surface of the body, internal organs, spine, peripheral nerves and blood vessels - 1 point;

3) long and extensive operations on internal organs, in traumatology, urology, oncology, neurosurgery - 1.5 points;

4) complex operations on the heart, large vessels, extended operations in oncology, repeated and reconstructive operations - 2 points;

5) complex heart surgeries under artificial circulation (using a heart-lung machine - artificial blood circulation machine), internal organ transplantation - 2.5 points.

III. Assessment of the nature of anesthesia:

1) local potentiated anesthesia - 0.5 points;

2) regional, spinal, epidural, intravenous anesthesia, inhalation mask anesthesia with spontaneous breathing - 1 point;

3) standard combined endotracheal anesthesia - 1.5 points;

4) combined endotracheal anesthesia in combination with artificial hypothermia, controlled arterial hypotension, massive infusion therapy, cardiac pacing - 2 points;

5) combined endotracheal anesthesia in combination with artificial circulation (use of artificial blood circulation), hyperbaric oxygenation, using intensive care, resuscitation - 2.5 points.

Risk levelassessed by the sum of points: I degree (minor risk) - 1.5 points; II degree (moderate risk) - 2-3 points; III degree (significant risk) - 3.5-5 points; IV degree (high risk) - 8.5-11 points.

The resulting indicator allows us to reduce the risk of surgical intervention by reducing its volume, correct choice of the nature of the operation and anesthesia with the lowest degree of risk.

Additional Research

A thorough examination helps to correctly assess the patient’s condition before surgery. During the period of preoperative preparation, there is a need to conduct additional studies.

From the anamnesis, it is necessary to find out the presence of thirst, the amount of fluid loss with vomiting, the amount of hematemesis and the approximate amount of blood loss due to external bleeding. Find out allergy and transfusion history: patient tolerance in the past

transfusion agents, as well as the presence of liver and kidney diseases, the amount of urine excreted in connection with the developed disease.

When examining the skin and mucous membranes, you should pay attention to their dryness, collapse of the superficial veins, which indicates dehydration and volemic disorders. Cyanosis of the fingertips and marbling of the skin indicate impaired microcirculation and respiratory failure.

It is mandatory to determine the frequency and nature of the pulse, blood pressure, and in seriously ill patients - central venous pressure (normally 50-150 mm water column), as well as an ECG study. The depth and frequency of breathing are determined, the presence of shortness of breath, noise and wheezing is noted during auscultation of the lungs.

To assess the excretory function of the kidneys, diuresis is determined - daily and hourly (normally 30-40 ml/h), and the relative density of urine.

In order to assess the state of homeostasis, the Hb concentration, hematocrit, acid-base status, the content of basic electrolytes (Na +, K +, Ca 2 +, Mg 2 +, C1 -), BCC and its components are periodically determined. Changes in homeostasis are not specific; they manifest themselves in various surgical diseases (trauma, bleeding, surgical infection).

In emergency situations, laboratory tests should be limited so as not to delay surgery. Once a diagnosis has been established, blood and urine tests (general tests) make it possible to determine the severity of inflammatory changes and blood loss (Hb content, hematocrit). A general urine test evaluates the state of kidney function. If possible, the electrolyte composition of the blood and bcc are examined using the express method. These data are important for transfusion therapy for both detoxification (for purulent inflammation) and replacement (for blood loss) purposes. The presence of chronic inflammatory diseases in the patient (inflammation of teeth, chronic tonsillitis, pharyngitis, pustular skin diseases, inflammation of the uterine appendages, prostate gland, etc.) is determined, and foci of chronic infection are sanitized. If the operation is performed according to relative indications, the patient can be discharged for the treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases.

The time to prepare for surgery is extremely limited during emergency interventions and is practically absent in extreme situations (heart injury, massive internal bleeding), when the patient is immediately taken to the operating room.

Preparing for surgery

Preparation for surgery begins before the patient enters the surgical department. At the first contact with the patient, the clinic or ambulance doctor determines the preliminary indications for surgery, conducts studies that make it possible to establish a diagnosis, conducts psychological preparation of the patient, explaining to him the need for the operation and convincing him of its favorable outcome. If the functions of vital organs are impaired, bleeding or shock occur, the doctor begins to carry out anti-shock measures, stop the bleeding, and use cardiac and vascular drugs. These actions continue when the patient is transported to the surgical department and are the beginning of preparing the patient for surgery.

Psychological preparation is aimed at calming the patient and instilling confidence in him in a favorable outcome of the operation. The patient is explained the inevitability of the operation and the need for its emergency performance, doing this in a gentle manner, in a calm voice, in order to instill confidence in the patient in the doctor. It is especially important to convince the patient if he refuses surgery, underestimating the severity of his condition. This applies to diseases and conditions such as acute appendicitis, strangulated hernia, perforation of a hollow organ (for example, with a stomach ulcer), intra-abdominal bleeding (with a disturbed ectopic pregnancy, rupture of the liver, spleen), penetrating injury to the abdomen, chest, when delay with surgery may lead to the progression of peritonitis, severe blood loss and irreparable consequences.

Preoperative preparation - an important stage in the surgical treatment of the patient. Even with an impeccably performed operation, if the dysfunctions of the organs and systems of the body are not taken into account and their correction is not carried out before, during and after the intervention, the success of treatment is questionable and the outcome of the operation may be unfavorable.

Preoperative preparation should be short-term, quickly effective and, in emergency situations, primarily aimed at reducing the degree of hypovolemia and tissue dehydration. In patients with hypovolemia, disturbances in water-electrolyte balance and acid-base status, infusion therapy is immediately started: dextran transfusion [cf. they say weight 50,000-70,000], albumin, protein, sodium bicarbonate solution for acidosis. To reduce metabolic acidosis, a concentrated solution of dextrose with insulin is administered. Cardiovascular drugs are used at the same time.

In case of acute blood loss and stopped bleeding, blood and dextran transfusions are performed [cf. they say weight 50,000-70,000], albumin, plasma. If bleeding continues, transfusion into several veins is started and the patient is immediately taken to the operating room, where an operation is performed to stop the bleeding under the cover of transfusion therapy, which is continued after the intervention.

When a patient is admitted in a state of shock (traumatic, toxic or hemorrhagic) and the bleeding has stopped, anti-shock therapy is carried out aimed at eliminating the shockogenic factor (elimination of pain in traumatic shock, stopping bleeding in hemorrhagic shock, detoxification therapy in toxic shock), restoring BCC (with the help of transfusion therapy) and vascular tone (using vasoconstrictors).

Shock is considered a contraindication to surgery (with the exception of hemorrhagic shock with ongoing bleeding). The operation is performed when blood pressure is not lower than 90 mmHg. In case of hemorrhagic shock and ongoing internal bleeding, surgery is performed without waiting for the patient to recover from the state of shock, since the cause of shock - bleeding - can only be eliminated during surgery.

Preparation of organs and homeostasis systems should be comprehensive and include the following activities:

1) improvement of vascular activity, correction of microcirculation disorders with the help of cardiovascular drugs, drugs that improve microcirculation (dextran [average molecular weight 30,000-40,000]);

2) the fight against respiratory failure (oxygen therapy, normalization of blood circulation, in extreme cases - controlled ventilation);

3) detoxification therapy - administration of fluids, blood-substituting solutions with detoxification action, forced diuresis, use of special detoxification methods - hemosorption, lymphosorption, plasmapheresis, oxygen therapy;

4) correction of disturbances in the hemostatic system.

If a patient is diagnosed with one or another type of hypovolemia, disturbances in the water-electrolyte balance, or acid-base state, the urgency of complex transfusion therapy is determined, aimed at eliminating the disturbances with the help of agents that restore bcc, eliminate dehydration, and normalize the acid-base state and electrolyte balance. (see chapter 7).

Special preoperative preparation is carried out in accordance with the disease and is determined by the localization of the process and the patient’s condition. Thus, an upcoming operation on the colon requires special preparation of the intestines: a slag-free diet, taking laxatives, and cleansing enemas are prescribed a few days before the operation. 2-3 days before surgery, the patient is given broad-spectrum antibiotics orally to reduce bacterial contamination of the colon and thereby reduce the risk of infection of surrounding tissues and intestinal sutures in the postoperative period.

During surgery for stenosis of the antrum of the stomach caused by a peptic ulcer or tumor, the stagnant gastric contents are first removed with a probe for several days and the stomach is washed to light water with a solution of sodium bicarbonate, a weak solution of hydrochloric acid or boiled water

For purulent lung diseases (abscess, bronchiectasis), in the preoperative period, comprehensive bronchial sanitation is carried out, using inhalations of antibiotics, antiseptics to combat microflora and proteolytic enzymes, mucolytic agents to liquefy and better remove purulent sputum; endotracheal and endobronchial administration of drugs is used, and therapeutic bronchoscopy is used to sanitize the bronchial tree and abscess cavity.

In order to sanitize the bone cavity and purulent fistulas in patients with chronic osteomyelitis, in the preoperative period, through catheters inserted into the fistula tracts, the bone cavity and fistula are washed for a long time with solutions of antibacterial drugs and proteolytic enzymes.

If the natural intake or passage of food is disrupted, the patient is immediately transferred to parenteral nutrition (see Chapter 7) or nutrition through a tube (passed below the narrowing of the esophagus or gastric outlet) or through a gastrostomy tube.

Particular attention is required in preparing for surgery patients whose surgical diseases or traumatic injuries occurred against the background of diabetes mellitus. Careful correction of the acid-base state (metabolic acidosis), disorders in the cardiovascular system, kidneys, and nervous system is necessary. Patients receiving long-acting forms of insulin are transferred to regular insulin before surgery.

These examples do not exhaust all possible options for special preoperative preparation - it has its own characteristics

for various diseases and is described in detail in the course of private surgery.

During the preoperative preparation of the patient, the need arises to perform certain procedures aimed at preparing the patient’s organs and systems. If the patient has eaten the day before or has intestinal obstruction, gastric lavage is performed before surgery to prevent vomiting or regurgitation during anesthesia.

Length gastric lavage you need a gastric tube, a funnel, a basin, a rubber apron, gloves, a mug and a jug of boiled water. If the patient’s condition allows, he is seated on a chair, but more often this procedure is carried out with the patient lying down. The end of the probe is lubricated with petroleum jelly, inserted into the oral cavity, then into the pharynx, forcing the patient to swallow, and slightly advance the probe along the esophagus. Reaching the first mark on the probe (50 cm) means that its end is in the cardiac part of the stomach. When the stomach is full, contents immediately begin to be released from the tube, which freely flows into the pelvis. When the spontaneous flow stops, a glass funnel is inserted into the outer end of the probe and the stomach is washed using a siphon. To do this, raise the funnel 20-25 cm above the level of the mouth and pour 0.5-1 liters of water into it, which passes into the stomach. To prevent air from entering the stomach, the stream must be continuous. When the liquid is completely released from the funnel, the latter is smoothly lowered to the patient’s knees (if he is sitting) or below the level of the bed (if he is in a horizontal position), and the bell of the funnel should be on top. The funnel begins to fill with liquid, and from the filled funnel it is poured into a bucket or basin. If less fluid comes out than was introduced into the stomach, the position of the probe is changed - it is inserted deeper or pulled up, and the funnel is smoothly raised and lowered again. The liquid released in this case is drained, after the release stops, a new one is poured in, and so on until the wash water is clean.

If the flow of liquid stops, you should use a Janet syringe to pour water under pressure into the probe several times and aspirate it. As a rule, stuck pieces of food can be removed, otherwise the probe is removed, cleaned and reinserted.

At the end of the rinsing, the probe is smoothly removed, covering it like a muff with a towel brought to the patient’s mouth.

Bladder catheterization before the operation it is performed for the purpose of emptying it, in case of urinary retention - to examine the bladder, if there is a suspicion of injury to the kidney or urinary tract.

For catheterization, you need a sterile rubber catheter, two sterile tweezers, sterile vaseline oil, cotton balls, a nitrofural solution 1:5000 or a 2% boric acid solution. All this is placed on a sterile tray. Hands are washed with running water and soap and treated with alcohol for 3 minutes.

During catheterization in men, the patient is placed on his back with the hips and knees bent and legs apart. A vessel or tray is placed between his legs to collect urine. The head of the penis and the area of ​​the external opening of the urethra are thoroughly wiped with a gauze ball moistened with an antiseptic solution. Use tweezers to take the catheter at a distance of 2-3 cm from its beak and lubricate it with petroleum jelly. With the left hand, between the third and fourth fingers, take the penis in the cervical area, and with the first and second fingers, push apart the external opening of the urethra and insert a catheter into it with tweezers. By moving the tweezers, the catheter is gradually advanced. A slight sensation of resistance when advancing the catheter is possible as it passes through the isthmic part of the urethra. The appearance of urine from the catheter confirms that it is in the bladder. When urine is excreted, its color, transparency, and quantity are noted. After urine is removed, the catheter is removed.

If an attempt to remove urine with a soft catheter fails, they resort to catheterization with a metal catheter, which requires certain skills (there is a risk of damage to the urethra).

Catheterization in women is technically easier to perform, since their urethra is short, straight and wide. It is performed with the patient lying on her back with her legs bent and spread. The patient lies on the ship. The external genitalia are washed with running water, the labia minora are separated with the fingers of the left hand and a cotton swab moistened with an antiseptic solution, and the area of ​​the external opening of the urethra is wiped. With the right hand, a catheter is inserted into it with tweezers. You can use a female metal catheter, which is taken by the pavilion so that its beak is facing upward. The catheter is easily advanced until urine appears. After removing the urine, the catheter is removed.

For cleansing enema An Esmarch mug with a rubber tube, a tap or clamp and a glass or plastic tip is required. Take 1-1.5 liters of water into a mug, fill the tube so that the air comes out, and close it at the very tip with a tap or clamp. The tip is lubricated with Vaseline oil. The patient is placed on the left side (according to the location of the sigmoid colon) and the tip is inserted into the rectum to a depth of 10-15 cm. The clamp is removed

they wash or open the tap, lift the mug and slowly introduce water into the rectum, then the tip is removed, the patient is laid on his back on a bedpan (or, if his condition allows, he sits on the bedpan). It is recommended to retain water for as long as possible.

Siphon enemaused in cases where it is not possible to clear the intestines of feces with a regular enema (intestinal obstruction, fecal blockage). For a siphon, a rubber tube or probe is used, which is placed on a large glass funnel. The patient is placed on his left side on the edge of the bed, couch or trestle bed. The funnel is filled with water and, by opening the clamp on the tube, the air is forced out of it, after which the clamp is applied again. The end of a rubber tube or probe is inserted into the rectum 10-12 cm, the clamp is removed and, lifting the funnel, water is injected into the colon in a volume of 2-3 liters. Water is constantly added to the funnel so that there is no interruption in the flow of liquid and air does not enter the intestine. When there is an urge to stool, the funnel is lowered below the level of the bed, then, like a siphon, the liquid will fill the funnel, and with the liquid, gases and feces will escape. When the funnel is filled, the liquid is drained. The procedure of filling the intestine with water and removing it is repeated several times, spending 10-15 liters. Abundant discharge of feces and gases, disappearance of pain, reduction of bloating are favorable signs for intestinal obstruction.

On the eve of the operation, the patient is examined by an anesthesiologist and, in accordance with the intended operation, the patient’s condition, and the method of pain relief, prescribes premedication (see Chapter 3).

Preliminary preparation of the surgical field

On the eve of the operation, the patient is given a cleansing enema, he takes a hygienic bath or shower, then his underwear and bed linen are changed. On the morning of the operation, the patient's hair in the area of ​​the surgical field is shaved using a dry method.

If there is a wound, the preparation of the surgical field has its own characteristics. The bandage is removed, the wound is covered with a sterile cloth, the surrounding skin is wiped with diethyl ether and the hair is shaved dry. All movements - rubbing the skin, shaving hair - should be carried out in the direction away from the wound to reduce the degree of contamination. After shaving the hair, the napkin is removed, the skin around the wound is lubricated with a 5% alcohol solution of iodine, and the wound is covered with a sterile napkin. In the operating room, the wound is again treated with an alcohol solution of iodine and isolated with sterile surgical linen.

Delivery of the patient to the operating room

The patient is taken to the operating room on a gurney. In emergency cases, the infusion of certain medicinal solutions is continued, while mechanical ventilation is performed using an endotracheal tube (if there was tracheal intubation).

If the patient had external bleeding and a tourniquet was applied, the patient is transported to the operating room with a tourniquet, which is removed during the operation or immediately before it. Also, in case of open fractures, the patient is taken to the operating room with a bandage applied to the wound and with a transport splint, and patients with acute intestinal obstruction - with a probe inserted into the stomach. The patient is carefully transferred from the gurney to the operating table along with the transfusion system, tourniquet or transport splint and placed in the position necessary to perform the operation.

Prevention of postoperative infectious complications

The sources of microflora that cause postoperative inflammatory complications can be either outside the human body (exogenous infection) or in the body itself (endogenous infection). By reducing the number of bacteria on the wound surface, the frequency of complications is significantly reduced, although today the role of exogenous infection in the development of postoperative complications due to the use of modern aseptic methods does not seem to be so significant. Endogenous infection of a surgical wound occurs through contact, hematogenous and lymphogenous routes. Prevention of postoperative inflammatory complications in this case consists of sanitizing foci of infection, gentle surgical technique, creating an adequate concentration of antibacterial drugs in the blood and lymph, as well as influencing the inflammatory process in the surgical area in order to prevent the transition of aseptic inflammation to septic.

Targeted prophylactic use antibiotics for the sanitation of foci of surgical infection when preparing patients for surgery, it is determined by the localization of the focus of possible infection and the suspected pathogen. For chronic inflammatory diseases of the respiratory tract (chronic bronchitis, sinusitis, pharyngitis), the use of macrolides is indicated. For chronic infection

genital organs (adnexitis, colpitis, prostatitis), it is advisable to use fluoroquinolones. For the general prevention of postoperative infectious complications in modern conditions, the most justified prescription of cephalosporins and aminoglycosides. Rational antibiotic prophylaxis reduces the incidence of postoperative complications. In this case, the type of surgical intervention, the patient’s condition, the virulence and toxicity of the pathogen, the degree of infection of the surgical wound and other factors are of great importance.

The choice of means and methods of prevention depends on a reasonable assessment of the likelihood of developing a postoperative infection and the possible pathogen (or pathogens). There are four types of surgical interventions, differing in the degree of risk of postoperative inflammatory complications.

I. "Clean" operations. Non-traumatic planned operations that do not affect the oropharynx, respiratory tract, gastrointestinal tract or genitourinary system, as well as orthopedic and operations such as mastectomy, strumectomy, hernia repair, phlebectomy, joint replacement, arthroplasty. At the same time, there are no signs of inflammation in the area of ​​the surgical wound. The risk of postoperative infectious complications during these operations is less than 5%.

II. “Conditionally clean” operations.“Clean” operations with a risk of infectious complications: planned operations on the oropharynx, digestive tract, female genital organs, urological and pulmonological (without signs of concomitant infection), re-intervention through a “clean” wound within 7 days, emergency and urgent operations, operations for closed injuries. The risk of postoperative infectious complications in this group is about 10%.

III. “Contaminated” (contaminated) operations. Surgical wounds have signs of non-purulent inflammation. These are operations accompanied by opening of the gastrointestinal tract, interventions on the genitourinary system or biliary tract in the presence of infected urine or bile, respectively; the presence of granulating wounds before applying secondary sutures, operations for open traumatic injuries, penetrating wounds treated within 24 hours (early primary surgical treatment). The risk of postoperative infectious complications reaches 20%.

IV. "Dirty" operations. Surgical interventions on obviously infected organs and tissues in the presence of concomitant or previous infection, perforation of the stomach, intestines,

operations in the oropharynx, for purulent diseases of the biliary or respiratory tract, interventions for penetrating wounds and traumatic wounds in the case of delayed and late surgical treatment (after 24-48 hours). The risk of postoperative infectious complications in such situations reaches 30-40%.

Many risk factors the development of infection after surgery is associated with the condition of the patient himself. The development of infection in a wound begins under certain conditions, individual for each patient and consisting in a decrease in local and general reactivity of the body. The latter is especially common in elderly patients or with concomitant diseases (anemia, diabetes, etc.). This may also be associated with the underlying disease: malignant neoplasm, intestinal obstruction, peritonitis. Local reactivity may decrease as a result of a lengthy operation, excessive trauma to the wound, with overly developed subcutaneous fatty tissue, due to rough surgical technique, due to technical difficulties during surgery, violation of the rules of asepsis and antisepsis. Local and general factors reducing reactivity are closely interrelated.

The presence of a previous or latent infection also creates a risk of developing purulent complications in patients. In patients who are implanted with prostheses made from foreign material, infection of the implant can occur even if surgery is performed in another anatomical area, especially in non-sterile areas (for example, colon surgery).

The patient's age is directly correlated with the frequency of infectious complications. This can be explained by the fact that older people have a high predisposition to developing infectious complications due to concomitant diseases. Also influenced by a decrease in the body's defenses, structural features of the skin of the abdominal wall (flabbiness, dryness), often excessive development of subcutaneous fatty tissue, as well as less strict adherence to the sanitary and hygienic regime, which is of particular importance during emergency operations.

Risk factors caused by the pathogenicity of microorganisms are essential for antibacterial prophylaxis and therapy. Infection involves the presence of a significant number of microorganisms that can have a pathogenic effect. Their exact number is virtually impossible to determine; Apparently, it depends on the type of microorganism, as well as on risk factors,

due to the patient's condition. Risk factors associated with pathogenic microorganisms, such as virulence in particular, are difficult to study, as is their role in the multifactorial etiology of wound infection. However, risk factors associated with the patient’s condition, the characteristics of the surgical intervention, and the nature of the pathological process that served as the basis for the surgical operation are subject to objective assessment and should be taken into account when performing preventive measures (Table 4).

Measures to influence the site of surgical intervention, aimed at preventing infectious complications, can be divided into two groups: specific and nonspecific.

To non-specific measures These include means and methods aimed at increasing the overall reactivity of the body, its resistance to any adverse effects that increase the body’s susceptibility to infection, improving operating conditions, surgical techniques, etc. The tasks of nonspecific prevention are solved during the preoperative preparation of patients. These include:

Normalization of homeostasis and metabolism;

Replenishment of blood loss;

Table 4.Risk factors for suppuration of surgical wounds

Anti-shock measures;

Normalization of protein and electrolyte balance;

Improving surgical techniques, careful handling of tissues;

Thorough hemostasis, reducing operation time.

The incidence of wound infections is influenced by factors such as the patient's age, exhaustion, obesity, radiation exposure to the surgical site, the qualifications of the surgeon performing the intervention, as well as concomitant conditions (diabetes mellitus, immunosuppression, chronic inflammation). However, strict adherence to the rules of asepsis and antisepsis during surgical operations in some cases is not enough.

Under specific measures it is necessary to understand the various types and forms of influence on the probable causative agents of bacterial complications, i.e. the use of means and methods of influencing the microbial flora, and above all, the prescription of antibiotics.

1. Forms of influence on the pathogen:

Sanitation of foci of infection;

The use of antibacterial agents on routes of transmission of infection (intravenous, intramuscular, endolymphatic administration of antibiotics);

Maintaining a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of antibacterial drugs in the surgical area - the site of tissue damage (antiseptic suture material, immobilized antibacterial drugs on implants, supplying antiseptics through microirrigators).

2. Immunocorrection and immunostimulation.

Postoperative infectious complications can be of different localization and nature, but the main ones are the following:

Wound suppuration;

Pneumonia;

Intracavitary complications (abdominal, pleural abscesses, empyema);

Inflammatory diseases of the urinary tract (pyelitis, pyelonephritis, cystitis, urethritis);

Sepsis.

The most common type of nosocomial infection is wound infection.

If there is a high probability of bacterial contamination of the wound, special preoperative preparation allows you to sanitize the source of infection or reduce the degree of bacterial contamination of the area

surgical intervention (colon, foci of infection in the oral cavity, pharynx, etc.). Intravenous infusion of antibiotics the day before, during and after surgery allows you to maintain the antibacterial activity of the blood due to the circulation of antibiotics. However, to achieve the required concentration in the surgical area (locus minoris resistentia) fails due to impaired local circulation, microcirculation disorder, tissue edema, aseptic inflammation.

It is possible to create the proper concentration only by using a depot of antibacterial agents by immobilizing antibiotics and introducing them into the structure of suture, plastic, and drainage materials.

The use of surgical antiseptic threads, plastic materials based on collagen and adhesive compositions, combined dressings and drainage materials containing chemical antiseptics and antibiotics ensures the maintenance of the antimicrobial effect in the surgical area for a long period, which prevents the development of purulent complications.

The use of various options for the immobilization of antibacterial agents by including them in the structure of dressings, sutures, and plastic materials, which ensures their slow release into the surrounding tissues and maintenance of therapeutic concentrations, is a promising direction in the prevention of purulent-inflammatory complications in surgery. The use of surgical antiseptic threads for anastomosis increases its mechanical strength by reducing the inflammatory and enhancing the reparative phase of wound healing. Osteoplastic materials based on collagen, containing antibiotics or chemical antiseptics for chronic osteomyelitis, are characterized by pronounced antibacterial activity and thereby have a positive effect on reparative processes in bone tissue.

It should be taken into account that during type I operations, antibacterial prophylaxis is impractical and is carried out only in cases where the possibility of tissue infection during surgery cannot be excluded (when performing prosthetics, installing a vascular shunt or artificial breast, the patient has an immunodeficiency state and reduced reactivity) . At the same time, during type III and IV operations, the use of antibacterial agents is mandatory and can be considered as preventive therapy for a nonspecific surgical infection, and in type IV surgical interventions, therapeutic courses are required rather than preventive ones.

Based on the above classification, the main emphasis in antibacterial prophylaxis should be on “conditionally clean” and some “conditionally dirty” postoperative wounds. Without preoperative prophylaxis, such operations have a high incidence of infectious complications; the use of antibiotics reduces the number of purulent complications.

The antibiotic prophylaxis regimen is determined not only by the type of surgical intervention, but also by the presence of risk factors for the development of postoperative inflammatory complications.

Examples of antibiotic prophylaxis for various surgical interventions include the following.

Vascular operations. The incidence of infectious complications increases with the installation of vascular prostheses. In most cases (75%), the infection develops in the groin area. The causative agents are usually staphylococci. Infection of a vascular bypass can lead to the need for its removal and loss of the affected limb; infection of a coronary artery bypass can cause death. In this regard, despite the low risk of infectious complications during many vascular operations, the prophylactic use of cephalosporins of the I-II generation or (at high risk) - III-IV generation, as well as fluoroquinolones, is indicated, especially during bypass surgery, taking into account the possibility of severe infectious consequences.

Surgeries on the head and neck. The prophylactic use of antibiotics can halve the incidence of wound infections during certain surgical interventions in the oral cavity and oropharynx. The use of penicillins is not always sufficient due to the high risk of infection; the use of generation cephalosporins is more justified. Other surgical interventions, such as removal of the thyroid gland, do not require antibiotic prophylaxis, unless it is due to the patient’s condition (presence of risk factors).

Operations on the upper gastrointestinal tract. Although the acidity of the contents of the upper gastrointestinal tract does not provide an adequate antibacterial effect, if it decreases due to the disease when taking medications, proliferation of the bacterial flora and an increase in the frequency of wound infections may be observed. Most operations in these departments are considered “conditionally clean”, therefore prophylactic use of antibiotics is indicated for them. Preference should be given to I-II generation cephalosporins, if necessary, in combination with metronidazole.

Operations on the biliary tract. It is preferable to use an antibiotic that is excreted in bile. More often, infection after operations on the biliary tract develops in patients with previous infection and positive results of bacteriological examination of bile. Wound infections with negative cultures are usually caused by Staphylococcus aureus. For most interventions on the biliary tract (such as laparoscopic and open cholecystectomy), cefazolin, cefuroxime, cefoperazone, and metronidazole are widely used. When conducting studies such as endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), ciprofloxacin is prescribed, which can penetrate into the bile even in the presence of bile duct obstruction.

Operations on the lower gastrointestinal tract. In case of appendicitis, prophylactic and, in severe cases, therapeutic use of antibiotics is justified. The most common bacteria found in appendicitis are Escherichia coli and bacteroides. In mild cases of appendicitis, the use of metronidazole in combination with one of the I-II generation cephalosporins is indicated.

During most operations on the colon and rectum (both planned and emergency), antibiotics are prescribed for prophylactic purposes - cefuroxime (or ceftriaxone), metronidazole, and in some cases the duration of courses of these drugs is increased. For interventions on the anorectal area (hemorrhoidectomy, removal of polyps, condylomas), the prophylactic use of antibiotics is not indicated.

Splenectomy.The absence of the spleen or impairment of its functions increases the risk of severe purulent complications, including sepsis after splenectomy. Most infectious complications develop in the first 2 years after splenectomy, although they may appear after more than 20 years. The risk of infection is higher in children and when splenectomy is performed not for injury, but for a malignant neoplasm. Antibiotic prophylaxis is recommended for all patients who have undergone splenectomy. The drugs of choice are generation cephalosporins. Phenoxymethylpenicillin is less effective; if you are allergic to penicillin, macrolides are indicated.

Antibiotic prophylaxis is not necessary in all cases, but sometimes it can be extremely beneficial both for the patient and from an economic point of view. The effectiveness of antibiotics should be determined by the surgeon based on the expected risk of postoperative infection. The choice of drug for prophylactic antibiotic therapy depends on the type of probable pathogens, the most

more often the cause of certain postoperative bacterial complications. However, infection can develop despite antibiotic prophylaxis, so the importance of other methods to prevent postoperative bacterial complications should not be underestimated.

Thus, prevention of postoperative complications is necessary at all stages of endo- and exogenous infection (impact on foci of infection, routes of transmission, surgical equipment, tissue in the surgical area), and the rules of asepsis and antisepsis should also be strictly observed.

POSTOPERATIVE PERIOD

Surgery and anesthesia are generally regarded as operational stress, and its consequences - how postoperative condition(postoperative illness).

Operational stress is caused by surgical trauma and occurs as a result of a complex of various influences on the patient: fear, excitement, pain, exposure to drugs, trauma, wound formation, abstinence from eating, the need to remain in bed, etc.

Various factors contribute to the appearance of a stressful state: 1) the general condition of the patient before and during surgery, due to the nature of the disease; 2) traumatism and duration of surgical intervention; 3) insufficient pain relief.

Postoperative period - the period of time from the end of the operation until the patient recovers or is transferred to disability. Distinguish early postoperative period- time from completion of the surgical operation to the patient’s discharge from the hospital - and late postoperative period- time from the moment the patient is discharged from the hospital until his recovery or transfer to disability.

Surgery and anesthesia lead to certain pathophysiological changes in the body of a general nature, which are a response to surgical trauma. The body mobilizes a system of protective factors and compensatory reactions aimed at eliminating the consequences of surgical trauma and restoring homeostasis. Under the influence of the operation, a new type of metabolism does not arise, but the intensity of individual processes changes - the ratio of catabolism and anabolism is disrupted.

Stages

In the postoperative state of the patient, three phases (stages) are distinguished: catabolic, reverse development and anabolic.

Catabolic phase

The duration of the phase is 3-7 days. It is more pronounced with serious changes in the body caused by the disease for which the operation was performed, as well as the severity of the operation. The catabolic phase is aggravated and prolonged by ongoing bleeding, the addition of postoperative (including purulent-inflammatory) complications, hypovolemia, changes in water-electrolyte and protein balance, as well as disturbances in the postoperative period (intractable pain, inadequate, unbalanced parenteral nutrition, hypoventilation of the lungs) .

The catabolic phase is a protective reaction of the body, the purpose of which is to increase its resistance through the rapid delivery of necessary energy and plastic materials.

It is characterized by certain neuroendocrine reactions: activation of the sympathetic-adrenal system, hypothalamus and pituitary gland, increased synthesis and entry into the blood of catecholamines, glucocorticoids, aldosterone, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). The concentration of dextrose in the blood increases and the insulin content decreases, and increased synthesis of angiotensin and renin occurs. Neurohumoral disorders lead to changes in vascular tone (vasospasm) and blood circulation in tissues, microcirculation disorders, impaired tissue respiration, hypoxia, metabolic acidosis, which in turn causes disturbances in the water-electrolyte balance, the release of fluid from the bloodstream into the interstitial spaces and cells, thickening of the blood and stasis of its formed elements. As a result, the degree of disruption in tissues of redox processes occurring under conditions of predominance (due to tissue hypoxia) of anaerobic glycolysis over aerobic one is aggravated. With such biochemical disorders and microcirculation disorders, the myocardium, liver and kidneys are primarily affected.

Increased protein breakdown is characteristic of the catabolic phase and represents the loss of not only muscle and connective tissue proteins, but, more importantly, enzyme proteins. The fastest breakdown of proteins occurs in the liver, plasma, gastrointestinal tract,

slower - proteins of striated muscles. Thus, when fasting for 24 hours, the amount of liver enzymes decreases by 50%. The total loss of protein in the postoperative period is significant. For example, after gastrectomy or gastrectomy, 10 days after surgery with an uncomplicated course and without parenteral nutrition, the patient loses 250-400 g of protein, which is 2 times the volume of plasma proteins and corresponds to a loss of 1700-2000 g of muscle mass. Protein loss increases significantly with blood loss and postoperative purulent complications; it is especially dangerous if the patient had hypoproteinemia before surgery.

Clinical manifestations The catabolic phase of the postoperative period has its own characteristics.

Nervous system. On the 1st day after surgery, due to the residual effect of narcotic and sedative substances, patients are lethargic, drowsy, and indifferent to the environment. Their behavior is calm in most cases. Starting from the 2nd day after the operation, as the effect of the narcotic drugs ceases and pain appears, manifestations of instability of mental activity are possible, which can be expressed in restless behavior, agitation, or, conversely, depression. Disorders of mental activity are caused by the addition of complications that increase hypoxia and disturbances in water and electrolyte balance.

The cardiovascular system. There is pallor of the skin, increased heart rate by 20-30%, a moderate increase in blood pressure, and a slight decrease in stroke volume of the heart.

Respiratory system. In patients, breathing becomes more frequent when its depth decreases. The vital capacity of the lungs is reduced by 30-50%. Shallow breathing may be caused by pain at the surgical site, high position of the diaphragm or limited mobility after surgery on the abdominal organs, or the development of gastrointestinal paresis.

Liver and kidney dysfunction manifested by an increase in dysproteinemia, a decrease in the synthesis of enzymes, as well as diuresis due to a decrease in renal blood flow and an increase in the content of aldosterone and antidiuretic hormone.

Reverse development phase

Its duration is 4-6 days. The transition from the catabolic phase to the anabolic phase does not occur immediately, but gradually. This period is characterized by a decrease in the activity of the sympathetic-adrenal system and catabolic processes, which

indicates a decrease in urinary nitrogen excretion to 5-8 g/day (instead of 15-20 g/day in the catabolic phase). The amount of nitrogen introduced is higher than that excreted in the urine. A positive nitrogen balance indicates normalization of protein metabolism and increased protein synthesis in the body. During this period, the excretion of potassium in the urine decreases and it accumulates in the body (participates in the synthesis of proteins and glycogen). Water-electrolyte balance is restored. In the neurohumoral system, the influences of the parasympathetic system predominate. The level of somatotropic hormone (GH) insulin and androgens is increased.

In the transition phase, the increased consumption of energy and plastic materials (proteins, fats, carbohydrates) still continues, although to a lesser extent. Gradually it decreases, and active synthesis of proteins, glycogen, and then fats begins, which increases as the severity of catabolic processes decreases. The final predominance of anabolic processes over catabolic ones indicates the transition of the postoperative period to the anabolic phase.

In an uncomplicated course of the postoperative period, the phase of reverse development begins 3-7 days after surgery and lasts 4-6 days. Its signs are the disappearance of pain, normalization of body temperature, and the appearance of appetite. Patients become active, the skin acquires a normal color, breathing becomes deep, and the number of respiratory movements decreases. The heart rate is approaching the initial preoperative level. The activity of the gastrointestinal tract is restored: peristaltic bowel sounds appear, gases begin to escape.

Anabolic phase

This phase is characterized by increased synthesis of protein, glycogen, and fats consumed during surgery and in the catabolic phase of the postoperative period.

The neuroendocrine response consists of activating the parasympathetic autonomic nervous system and increasing the activity of anabolic hormones. Protein synthesis is stimulated by growth hormone and androgens, the activity of which increases significantly in the anabolic phase. STH activates the transport of amino acids from the intercellular spaces into the cell. Androgens actively influence protein synthesis in the liver, kidneys, and myocardium. Hormonal processes lead to an increase in the amount of proteins in the blood, organs, and also in the wound area, thereby ensuring reparative processes, growth and development of connective tissue.

In the anabolic phase of the postoperative period, glycogen reserves are restored due to the anti-insulin effect of GH.

Clinical signs characterize the anabolic phase as a period of recovery, restoration of impaired functions of the cardiovascular, respiratory, excretory systems, digestive organs, and nervous system. In this phase, the patient’s well-being and condition improve, appetite increases, heart rate and blood pressure normalize, the activity of the gastrointestinal tract is restored: food passage, absorption processes in the intestines, independent stool appears.

The duration of the anabolic phase is 2-5 weeks. Its duration depends on the severity of the operation, the initial condition of the patient, the severity and duration of the catabolic phase. This phase ends with an increase in body weight, which begins after 3-4 weeks and continues until complete recovery (sometimes several months). Restoring body weight depends on many factors: the degree of its loss in the preoperative period due to debilitating diseases, the volume and severity of the operation, postoperative complications, the severity and duration of the catabolic phase of the postoperative period. Within 3-6 months, the processes of reparative regeneration are finally completed - the maturation of connective tissue, the formation of a scar.

Monitoring patients

After the operation, patients are admitted to an intensive care unit or ward, which are specially organized for monitoring patients, conducting intensive care and providing emergency care if necessary. To monitor the patient’s condition, the departments have devices that allow them to constantly record pulse rate, rhythm, ECG and EEG. The express laboratory allows you to monitor the level of hemoglobin, hematocrit, electrolytes, blood proteins, bcc, and acid-base status. The intensive care unit has everything necessary to provide emergency care: a set of medications and transfusion media, mechanical ventilation equipment, sterile sets for venesection and tracheostomy, a cardiac defibrillation apparatus, sterile catheters, probes, and an equipped dressing table.

A thorough examination of the patient is carried out using general clinical research methods (inspection, palpation, percussion, auscultation), and, if necessary, instrumental research (ECG,

EEG, radiography, etc.). Carry out constant monitoring of the patient's mental state (consciousness, behavior - excitement, depression, delirium, hallucinations), his skin (pallor, cyanosis, jaundice, dryness, sweating).

When examining the cardiovascular system, the pulse rate, filling, rhythm, blood pressure level and, if necessary, central venous pressure, the nature of heart sounds, and the presence of murmurs are determined. When examining the respiratory organs, the frequency, depth, and rhythm of breathing are assessed, and percussion and auscultation of the lungs are performed.

When examining the digestive organs, the condition of the tongue (dryness, the presence of plaque), the abdomen (bloating, participation in breathing, the presence of symptoms of peritoneal irritation: muscle tension in the abdominal wall, Shchetkin-Blumberg sign, peristaltic bowel sounds) are determined, and the liver is palpated. Information is obtained from the patient about the passage of gases and the presence of stool.

The study of the urinary system includes determination of daily diuresis, urine flow rate through a permanent urinary catheter, and hourly diuresis.

Laboratory data are analyzed: hemoglobin content, hematocrit, indicators of acid-base status, bcc, blood electrolytes. Changes in laboratory parameters, along with clinical data, make it possible to correctly determine the composition and volume of transfusion therapy and select medications.

The patient is examined multiple times in order to compare the data obtained and promptly identify possible deteriorations in his condition, identify early symptoms of possible complications and begin treatment as quickly as possible.

Data from the examination and special studies are entered into a special card for monitoring the patient in the intensive care unit and noted in the medical history in the form of diary entries.

When monitoring a patient, one should focus on critical indicators of the activity of organs and systems, which should serve as the basis for determining the cause of the deterioration of the patient’s condition and providing emergency assistance.

1. Condition of the cardiovascular system: pulse more than 120 per minute, decrease in SBP to 80 mm Hg. and below and increasing it to 200 mmHg, cardiac arrhythmia, decreased central venous pressure below 50 mmHg. and increasing it to more than 110 mm water column.

2. State of the respiratory system: number of respirations more than 28 per minute, pronounced shortening of percussion sound, dull sound above the lungs

mi during percussion of the chest, absence of respiratory sounds in the dullness zone.

3. Condition of the skin and visible mucous membranes: severe pallor, acrocyanosis, cold sticky sweat.

4. Condition of the excretory system: decreased urination (urine amount less than 10 ml/h), anuria.

5. Condition of the gastrointestinal tract organs: sharp tension in the muscles of the anterior abdominal wall, black feces (admixture of blood), sharply positive Shchetkin-Blumberg symptom, severe bloating, non-passage of gases, absence of peristaltic bowel sounds for more than 3 days.

6. State of the central nervous system: loss of consciousness, delirium, hallucinations, motor and speech agitation, lethargy.

7. Condition of the surgical wound: copious soaking of the bandage with blood, divergence of the edges of the wound, protrusion of abdominal organs into the wound (eventration), copious soaking of the bandage with pus, intestinal contents, bile, and urine.

Treatment

Measures are taken to compensate for metabolic disorders, restore impaired organ functions, normalize redox processes in tissues (oxygen delivery, removal of under-oxidized metabolic products, carbon dioxide, replenishment of increased energy costs).

An important point in maintaining and improving protein and electrolyte metabolism is parenteral and, if possible, enteral nutrition of the patient. Natural introduction of fluids and nutrients should be preferred and used as early as possible.

Key points of intensive care in the postoperative period:

1) pain control with the help of painkillers, electroanalgesia, epidural anesthesia, etc.;

2) restoration of cardiovascular activity, elimination of microcirculation disorders (cardiovascular drugs, dextran [average molecular weight 30,000-40,000]);

3) prevention and treatment of respiratory failure (oxygen therapy, breathing exercises, controlled pulmonary ventilation);

4) detoxification therapy (see Chapter 7);

5) correction of metabolic disorders (water-electrolyte balance, acid-base status, protein synthesis) (see Chapter 7);

6) balanced parenteral nutrition (see Chapter 7);

7) restoration of the functions of the excretory system;

8) restoration of the functions of organs whose activity is impaired due to surgery (intestinal paresis during operations on the abdominal organs, hypoventilation, atelectasis during operations on the lungs, etc.).

Complications

In the early postoperative period complications can arise at different times. In the first 2 days after surgery, complications such as bleeding (internal or external), acute vascular failure (shock), acute heart failure, asphyxia, respiratory failure, complications from anesthesia, water-electrolyte imbalance, decreased urination (oliguria, anuria), paresis of the stomach, intestines.

In the following days after surgery (3-8 days), the development of cardiovascular failure, pneumonia, thrombophlebitis, thromboembolism, acute hepatic-renal failure, and wound suppuration is possible.

A patient who has undergone surgery and anesthesia may experience complications in the postoperative period due to disruption of the basic functions of the body. The causes of postoperative complications may be related to the underlying disease for which the surgery was performed, the anesthesia and surgery suffered, and exacerbation of concomitant diseases. All complications can be divided into early and late.

Early complications

Early complications can arise in the first hours and days after surgery; they are associated with the inhibitory effect of narcotic substances on breathing and blood circulation, and with uncompensated water and electrolyte disturbances. Drugs that are not eliminated from the body and muscle relaxants that are not destroyed lead to respiratory depression, until it stops. This is manifested by hypoventilation (rare shallow breathing, recessed tongue), and apnea may develop.

Breathing disorders can also be caused by vomiting and regurgitation in a patient who has not completely recovered from the state of narcotic sleep. Therefore, monitoring the patient in the early postoperative period is very important. If breathing is impaired, it is necessary to immediately establish mechanical ventilation with an Ambu bag; if the tongue is retracted, use air ducts that restore the patency of the airways. In case of respiratory depression caused by the ongoing effect of narcotic substances, respiratory analeptics (nalorphine, bemegride) can be used.

Bleeding -the most serious complication of the postoperative period. It can be external (from a wound) and internal - hemorrhage in the cavity (thoracic, abdominal) tissue. Common signs of bleeding are pale skin, weak, rapid pulse, and decreased blood pressure. When bleeding from a wound, the bandage is soaked with blood, and bleeding from drains inserted into body cavities and tissue is possible. The increase in clinical and laboratory signs with slowly progressing internal bleeding allows us to clarify the diagnosis. Methods to stop bleeding are described in Chapter 5. If conservative measures are unsuccessful, wound revision and repeated surgery - relaparotomy, rethoracotomy - are indicated.

In the first days after surgery, patients may have disturbances in water-electrolyte balance, caused by an underlying disease in which there is loss of water and electrolytes (intestinal obstruction), or blood loss. Clinical signs of water-electrolyte imbalance are dry skin, increased skin temperature, decreased skin turgor, dry tongue, severe thirst, soft eyeballs, decreased central venous pressure and hematocrit, decreased diuresis, and tachycardia. It is necessary to immediately correct the deficiency of water and electrolytes by transfusion of appropriate solutions (Ringer-Locke solutions, potassium chloride, Sodium acetate + Sodium chloride, Sodium acetate + Sodium chloride + Potassium chloride). Transfusion must be carried out under the control of central venous pressure, the amount of urine released and the level of blood electrolytes. Fluid and electrolyte disorders can also occur in the late period after surgery, especially in patients with intestinal fistulas. In this case, constant correction of the electrolyte balance and transfer of the patient to parenteral nutrition are necessary.

In the early postoperative period, there may be respiratory disorders, associated with pulmonary atelectasis, pneumonia, bronchitis; These complications are especially common in elderly patients. To prevent respiratory complications, early activation of

tion of the patient, adequate pain relief after surgery, therapeutic exercises, percussion and vacuum chest massage, aerosol steam inhalations, inflation of rubber chambers. All these measures contribute to the opening of collapsed alveoli and improve the drainage function of the bronchi.

Complications from the cardiovascular system often occur against the background of uncompensated blood loss, disturbed water-electrolyte balance and require adequate correction. In elderly patients with concomitant pathology of the cardiovascular system, against the background of the underlying surgical disease, anesthesia and surgery in the postoperative period, episodes of acute cardiovascular failure (tachycardia, rhythm disturbances), as well as an increase in central venous pressure, which serves as a symptom of left ventricular failure and pulmonary edema, may occur. Treatment is individual in each specific case (cardiac glycosides, antiarrhythmics, coronary dilators). For pulmonary edema, ganglion blockers, diuretics, and inhalation of oxygen moistened with alcohol are used.

During operations on the gastrointestinal tract, one of the complications may be intestinal paresis(dynamic intestinal obstruction). It usually develops in the first 2-3 days after surgery. Its main signs: bloating, absence of peristaltic bowel sounds. For the prevention and treatment of paresis, intubation of the stomach and intestines, early activation of the patient, anesthesia, epidural anesthesia, perirenal blockades, intestinal stimulants (neostigmine methyl sulfate, diadynamic currents, etc.) are used.

Urinary dysfunction in the postoperative period may be due to a change in the excretory function of the kidneys or the addition of inflammatory diseases - cystitis, urethritis, pyelonephritis. Urinary retention can also be of a reflex nature - caused by pain, spastic contraction of the abdominal muscles, pelvis, and bladder sphincters.

For seriously ill patients after long-term traumatic operations, a permanent catheter is installed in the bladder, which allows systematic monitoring of diuresis. In case of urinary retention, painkillers and antispastic agents are administered; A warm heating pad is placed on the bladder area above the pubis. If the patient's condition allows, men are allowed to stand up to try to urinate while standing. If it fails, urine is removed with a soft catheter; if this fails, with a hard (metal) catheter. As a last resort, when attempts at catheterization

bladder are ineffective (with benign prostatic hyperplasia), a suprapubic bladder fistula is applied.

Thromboembolic complications in the postoperative period they are rare and mainly develop in the elderly and seriously ill. The source of embolism is most often the veins of the lower extremities and pelvis. Slowing blood flow and changing the rheological properties of blood can lead to thrombosis. Prevention includes activation of patients, treatment of thrombophlebitis, bandaging of the lower extremities, correction of the blood coagulation system, which includes the use of sodium heparin, administration of agents that reduce the aggregation of blood cells (for example, dextran [average molecular weight 30,000-40,000], acetylsalicylic acid ), daily fluid transfusion to create moderate hemodilution.

Development wound infection most often occurs on the 3-10th day of the postoperative period. Pain in the wound, increased body temperature, tissue compaction, inflammatory infiltrate, hyperemia of the skin around the wound are indications for its revision, partial or complete removal of sutures. Subsequent treatment is carried out according to the principle of treating a purulent wound.

In exhausted patients who are in bed for a long time in a forced position, it is possible to develop bedsores in places of tissue compression. More often, bedsores appear in the area of ​​the sacrum, less often - in the area of ​​the shoulder blades, heels, etc. In this case, the places of compression are treated with camphor alcohol, the patients are placed on special rubber circles, an anti-bedsore mattress, and a 5% solution of potassium permanganate is used. When necrosis has developed, necrectomy is resorted to, and treatment is carried out according to the principle of treating a purulent wound. To prevent bedsores, early activation of the patient, turning him in bed, treating the skin with antiseptics, using rubber circles and mattresses, and clean, dry linen are necessary.

Pain syndrome in the postoperative period. The absence of pain after surgery largely determines the normal course of the postoperative period. In addition to psycho-emotional perception, pain syndrome leads to respiratory depression, reduces the cough impulse, promotes the release of catecholamines into the blood, against this background tachycardia occurs, and blood pressure increases.

To relieve pain, you can use narcotic drugs that do not depress respiration and cardiac activity (for example, fentanyl), non-narcotic analgesics (metamizole sodium), transcutaneous electroanalgesia, long-term epidural anesthesia,

acupuncture. The latter methods in combination with analgesics are especially indicated for the elderly. Pain relief allows the patient to cough up mucus well, breathe deeply, and be active, which determines a favorable course of the postoperative period and prevents the development of complications.

Prepare: scissors, shaving machine, blades, soap, balls, napkins, water basins, towels, linen, antiseptics: alcohol, iodonate, rokkal; syringes and needles for them, Esmarch's mug, gastric and duodenal tubes, catheters, Janet's syringe.

Preparation for planned surgery.

Sequencing:

Direct preparation for the operation is carried out on the eve of the operation and on the day of the operation;

The night before:

1. warn the patient that the last meal should be no later than 17-18 hours;

2. cleansing enema;

3. hygienic bath or shower;

4. change of bed and underwear;

5. drug premedication as prescribed by an anesthesiologist.

On the morning of the operation:

1. thermometry;

2. cleansing enema to clean waters;

3. gastric lavage according to indications;

4. shave the surgical field dry, wash with warm water and soap;

5. treatment of the surgical field with ether or gasoline;

6. covering the surgical field with a sterile diaper;

7. premedication as prescribed by the anesthesiologist 30–40 minutes before surgery;

8. checking the oral cavity for the presence of removable dentures and removing them;

9. remove rings, watches, makeup, lenses;

10. empty your bladder;

11. isolate the hair on the head under a cap;

12. transportation to the operating room lying on a gurney.

Preparing for emergency surgery.

Sequencing:

Inspection of the skin, hairy parts of the body, nails and treatment if necessary (wiping, washing);

Partial sanitization (wiping, washing);

Dry shaving of the surgical field;

Fulfilling doctor's orders: tests, enemas, gastric lavage, premedication, etc.).

Treatment of the surgical field according to Filonchikov-Grossikh.

Indication: maintaining asepsis in the patient's surgical field.

Prepare: sterile dressings and instruments: balls, forceps, tweezers, clippers, sheets; sterile containers; antiseptics (iodonate, iodopyrone, 70% alcohol, degmin, degmicide, etc.); containers for waste material, containers with disinfectant solutions.

Sequencing:

1. Moisten a sterile ball generously in 5–7 ml of a 1% solution of iodonate (iodopyrone) using tweezers or forceps.

2. Give the tweezers (forceps) to the surgeon.

3. Perform extensive treatment of the patient’s surgical field.

4. Discard the tweezers (forceps) into a container for waste material.

5. Repeat the wide treatment of the surgical field twice more.

6. Cover the patient with sterile sheets with an incision in the surgical area.

7. Treat the skin in the incision area with an antiseptic once.

8. Treat the skin of the wound edges once before applying sutures.

9. Treat the skin in the area of ​​the sutures once.

Elective surgery is a planned, non-emergency surgical procedure. Elective surgery can be performed either when medically necessary (eg, elective cataract surgery) or optional (eg, breast augmentation).

Purpose of elective surgery

Elective elective surgery may prolong life or improve quality of life physically and/or psychologically. Cosmetic and reconstructive procedures - such as a facelift (rhytidectomy), tummy tuck (abdominoplasty) or nose surgery (rhinoplasty) - may not typically be performed for medical reasons, but they may benefit the patient in terms of improving self-esteem. Other procedures, such as cataract surgery, improve functional quality of life, even when done “optional” or as an elective procedure.

Some elective surgeries, such as angioplasty, are necessary to prolong life. However, unlike emergency surgery (eg for appendicitis), which must be performed immediately, the required procedure can be planned based on the wishes of both the patient and the surgeon.

Planned surgery: description

There are hundreds of elective elective surgeries covering all body systems in modern medical practice. Several major categories of common elective procedures include:

Plastic surgery. Cosmetic or reconstructive surgery that improves appearance and (in some cases) physical function.

Refractive surgery. Laser surgery for vision correction.

Gynecological surgery. It is carried out both for medical reasons and for the consideration of the surgeon.

Exploratory or diagnostic surgery. Surgery performed to determine the origin and extent of a medical problem or to biopsy tissue samples.


Cardiovascular surgery.
Non-emergency elective surgeries to improve blood flow or heart function: such as angioplasty or pacemaker implantation.

Surgery of the musculoskeletal system. Orthopedic surgical procedures: such as hip replacements and some types of reconstructions.

Diagnosis and preparation for elective surgery

Diagnosis and preparation for elective surgery are carried out taking into account the intended purpose: for example, to confirm the diagnosis or additional surgery when planning the main procedure. Typically, the preoperative evaluation includes a complete medical history, physical examination, and laboratory tests (eg, urinalysis, x-ray, blood test, electrocardiogram).

The use of medications before elective surgery depends on the type of procedure. During general anesthesia, the patient must comply with dietary restrictions. If blood loss is expected during the procedure, a preliminary blood draw may be recommended.

A brief algorithm for preparing for elective surgery


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  1. Examination by a surgeon who will determine the need for a particular operation. When deciding whether to undergo cosmetic surgery, during the examination the doctor explains all the nuances of the planned intervention and the expected result.
  2. Additional consultations: if there are concomitant diseases that may affect the course of the operation, the patient should be examined by an appropriate specialist. For heart diseases - a cardiologist, lungs - a pulmonologist, gastrointestinal tract - a gastroenterologist.

    Instrumental and laboratory research methods. Each patient must undergo certain tests at the stage of preparation for a planned operation. This list can be significantly expanded by the attending physician. Minimum list:

  • general blood analysis;
  • blood for AIDS, syphilis and hepatitis;
  • coagulogram;
  • Chest x-ray or fluorography.
  • Direct preparation on the eve of the operation includes refusing to eat 12 hours before the planned intervention, and drinking 3-4 hours before. If an intervention on the abdominal cavity is planned, then it is necessary to cleanse the intestines using a powerful laxative (Fortrans or an analogue) or through cleansing enemas. For operations without intervention in the abdominal cavity, this is not at all necessary.
  • Elective surgery: care for the convalescent

    Recovery time and post-operative care will vary depending on the elective procedure performed. The patient is given complete post-operative instructions before returning home after surgery.

    Risks of elective surgery

    The risks of elective surgery vary depending on the type of procedure performed. In general, most invasive surgeries carry the risk of infection, bleeding, and vascular problems (thrombosis). Anesthesia may also pose a risk for complications such as anaphylactic shock (an allergic reaction).

    Normal results

    The results of elective surgeries depend on the type of procedures performed. In some cases, normal results may be temporary (that is, subsequent operations may be required at a later date). For example, a facelift may ultimately require a repeat procedure.

    Alternatives to elective surgery

    The alternative options available for a particular operation depend on the purpose of the procedure. For example, many other birth control options may be used. While some other types of operations have no alternatives.

    Denial of responsibility: The information presented in this article about elective surgeries is intended to inform the reader only. It is not intended to be a substitute for advice from a healthcare professional.

    Surgery- this is the exposure of a pathological focus by dissecting tissue for the purpose of treating or diagnosing a disease. Operation the most responsible and dangerous stage in the treatment of a patient and therefore must be performed according to strictly justified indications. If the patient can be cured without surgery, it should not be offered.

    The following are distinguished: indications for surgery: absolute, conditionally absolute, relative.

    Absolute readings arise in cases where the disease threatens the patient’s life, and surgery is the only treatment method that can, in most cases, eliminate this threat. In emergency surgery, the term “surgery for life-saving indications” is used, which corresponds to absolute indications.

    Conditional absolute indications arise in cases where the disease impairs health, reduces ability to work, and surgical intervention is the only method of treatment that can, in most cases, ensure restoration of health and/or ability to work.

    Relative readings arise in cases where the disease impairs health, reduces ability to work, and surgical intervention is one of the treatment methods, which in most cases can ensure the restoration of health and/or ability to work.

    By deadlines differentiate emergency, urgent, delayed and planned operations.

    Emergency(urgent) operations performed immediately after admission to the hospital or in the first 2–4 hours after hospitalization. They are produced for external bleeding associated with damage to large vessels; with profuse, repeated gastroduodenal bleeding; abdominal injuries with damage to internal organs, peritonitis, acute septic diseases in the purulent-necrotic stage, etc.

    Urgent operations perform within 24–48 hours after hospitalization of patients. They are produced for acute cholecystitis, pancreatitis and other acute diseases, when intensive conservative therapy is ineffective.

    Deferred(postponed) operations performed for acute surgical pathology in 8–10 days after patients are admitted to the hospital in cases where the pathological process is effectively controlled by conservative therapy and therefore it is possible to prepare the patient for the upcoming operation.

    Planned operations performed routinely for diseases that currently do not directly threaten the patient’s life. They are produced for tumors of various localizations, uncomplicated peptic ulcers, hernias, varicose veins, hemorrhoids and other diseases.

    Surgical interventions are divided into radical, palliative, symptomatic, trial, diagnostic, rehabilitation.

    Radical operations- surgical interventions that provide recovery in most cases. They can be single- or multi-moment.

    Palliative operations provide prolongation of the patient's life.

    Symptomatic operations eliminate painful symptoms of the disease (pain, impaired passage through the esophagus, stomach, intestines, etc.).

    Trial operations- an attempt at radical surgical treatment of certain diseases (tumors, alveolar echinococcus, thrombosis of the main trunk of the mesenteric artery, pulmonary artery, portal vein, etc.), which was not successful.

    Diagnostic operations are performed in cases where all other research methods do not allow us to clarify the nature of the disease.

    Rehabilitation(plastic, reconstructive) operations improve the quality of life of patients who have developed gross anatomical, functional or cosmetic defects during surgical treatment or as a result of congenital deformity.

    Plastic surgery- these are interventions, the main feature of which is the movement (transplantation, transplantation) of tissues and organs or the implantation of materials replacing them.

    Recovery operations- these are interventions that use various techniques to recreate the integrity of organs and restore their functions in case of congenital or acquired defects.

    In recent years, along with traditional methods and techniques, endoscopic, laparoscopic and microsurgical surgical interventions are increasingly being used.

    Laparoscopy is very informative as a method. It allows, in an extremely short time, with minimal trauma for the patient, to objectify the intended diagnosis in difficult situations, including emergency surgery, which means? reduce the duration of clinical observation and the time spent deciding on the nature of further treatment.

    From a pathophysiological point of view, surgery is a planned multicomponent, sometimes extremely severe stress. Surgical trauma (stress) is not only the surgical intervention itself (mechanical damage), but also a number of unfavorable factors that cause disorganization of the functions of tissues, organs and systems. If the surgical trauma exceeds the physiological capabilities of the body's life support systems, then death is possible. Therefore, the main responsibility of the surgeon and anesthesiologist is, if possible, to protect the patient’s body from the stress factors of surgical trauma or to reduce their negative effects.