Conference Coverage

VIDEO: When to turn to surgery in postpartum uterine infection


 

AT IDSOG

– When postpartum infections don’t respond to antibiotics, doctors and surgeons need to move fast; surgery – often hysterectomy – is the only thing that will save the woman’s life.

The problem is that with today’s antibiotics, doctors may have never encountered the situation, and sometimes continue to treat with antibiotics until it’s too late.

In Seattle, physicians turn to David Eschenbach, MD, chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington, for advice on when it’s time to give up on antibiotics and go to the OR. It’s a difficult decision, especially when patients are young.

In an interview at the annual scientific meeting of the Infectious Diseases Society for Obstetrics and Gynecology, Dr. Eschenbach shared what he’s learned from decades of experience in dealing with one of the most devastating postpartum complications.

Recommended Reading

Chlorhexidine beats iodine for preventing C-section wound infections
MDedge Surgery
Adding azithromycin cuts postcesarean maternal infections
MDedge Surgery
Care bundle reduces cesarean surgical site infections
MDedge Surgery
FDA warning: General anesthetics may damage young brains
MDedge Surgery
VIDEO: Dual antibiotic prophylaxis cuts cesarean SSIs
MDedge Surgery
Monofilament suture works best for cesarean closure
MDedge Surgery
Postcesarean outpatient opioid needs predicted by inpatient use
MDedge Surgery
Pregnancy boosts risk of ventral hernia recurrence
MDedge Surgery
Umbilical hernia repair during pregnancy safe, but often serious
MDedge Surgery
C-section raises hysterectomy complication risk later
MDedge Surgery

Related Articles