Kucisec-Tepes Nastja, Bejuk Danijela, Kosuta Dragutin
Zavod za klinicku mikrobiologiju i hospitalne infekcije Opća bolnica "Sveti Duh" Sveti Duh 64 10000 Zagreb, Hrvatska.
Acta Med Croatica. 2006 Sep;60(4):353-63.
War wounds are the most complex type of non-targeted injuries due to uncontrolled tissue damage of varied and multifold localizations, exposing sterile body areas to contamination with a huge amount of bacteria. Wound contamination is caused by both the host microflora and exogenous agents from the environment (bullets, cloth fragments, dust, dirt, water) due to destruction of the host protective barriers. War wounds are the consequence of destructive effects of various types of projectiles, which result in massive tissue devitalization, hematomas, and compromised circulation with tissue ischemia or anoxia. This environment is highly favorable for proliferation of bacteria and their invasion in the surrounding tissue over a relatively short period of time. War wounds are associated with a high risk of local and systemic infection. The infection will develop unless a timely combined treatment is undertaken, including surgical intervention within 6 hours of wounding and antibiotic therapy administered immediately or at latest in 3 hours of wound infliction. Time is a crucial factor in this type of targeted combined treatment consisting of surgical debridement, appropriate empirical antimicrobial therapy, and specific antitetanic prophylaxis. Apart from exposure factors, there are a number of predisposing factors that favor the development of polymicrobial aerobic-anaerobic infection. These are shock, pain, blood loss, hypoxia, hematomas, type and amount of traumatized tissue, age, and comorbidity factors in the wounded. The determinants that define the spectrum of etiologic agents in contaminated war wounds are: wound type, body region involved, time interval between wounding and primary surgical treatment, climate factors, season, geographical area, hygienic conditions, and patient habits. The etiologic agents of infection include gram-positive aerobic cocci, i. e. Staphylococcus spp, Streptococcus spp and Enterococcus spp, which belong to the physiological flora of the human skin and mucosa; gram-negative facultative aerobic rods; members of the family Enterobacteriacea (Escherichia coil, Proteus mirabilis, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter cloacae), which predominate in the physiological flora of the intestines, transitory flora of the skin and environment; gram-negative bacteria, i. e. Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Serratia marcescens, Acinetobacter calcoaceticus - A. baumanii complex; environmental bacteria associated with humid environment and dust; anaerobic gram-positive sporogeneous rods Clostridium spp, gram-negative asporogeneous rods Bacteroides spp and gram-positive anaerobic cocci; Peptostreptococcus spp and Peptococcus spp. The latter usually colonize the intestine, primarily the colon, and the skin, while clostridium spores are also found in the environment. Early empirical antibiotic therapy is used instead of standard antibiotic prophylaxis. Empirical antimicrobial therapy is administered to prevent the development of systemic infection, gas gangrene, necrotizing infection of soft tissue, intoxication and death. The choice of antibiotics is determined by the presumed infective agents and localization of the wound. It is used in all types of war wounds over 5-7-10 days. The characteristics of antibiotics used in war wounds are the following: broad spectrum of activity, ability to penetrate deep into the tissue, low toxicity, long half-life, easy storage and application, and cost effectiveness. The use of antibiotics is not a substitution for surgical treatment. The expected incidence of infection, according to literature data, is 35%-40%. If the time elapsed until surgical debridement exceeds 12 hours, or the administration of antibiotics exceeds 6 hours of wound infliction, primary infection of the war wound occurs (early infection) in more than 50% of cases. The keys for the prevention of infection are prompt and thorough surgical exploration of the wound, administration of antibiotics and antitetanic prophylaxis, awareness of the probable pathogens with respect to localization of the wound, and optimal choice of antibiotics and length of their administration.
战伤是最复杂的非靶向性损伤类型,因其造成的组织损伤无法控制,损伤部位多样且复杂,使无菌体腔暴露于大量细菌污染之下。宿主保护屏障遭到破坏,导致伤口污染,其原因既有宿主自身的微生物群,也有来自环境的外源性因素(子弹、布片、灰尘、污垢、水)。战伤是由各种类型的投射物造成的破坏性后果,会导致大量组织失活、血肿形成,以及因组织缺血或缺氧而导致的血液循环障碍。这种环境非常有利于细菌的增殖,并在相对较短的时间内侵入周围组织。战伤伴有局部和全身感染的高风险。除非及时采取联合治疗,包括在受伤后6小时内进行手术干预,并立即或最迟在受伤后3小时内给予抗生素治疗,否则感染将会发生。在这种由手术清创、适当的经验性抗菌治疗和特异性破伤风预防组成的靶向联合治疗中,时间是一个关键因素。除了暴露因素外,还有许多易感因素有利于多种需氧菌 - 厌氧菌混合感染的发生。这些因素包括休克、疼痛、失血、缺氧、血肿、受伤组织的类型和数量、年龄以及伤员的合并症因素。决定污染战伤病原体谱的因素有:伤口类型、受累身体部位、受伤与初次手术治疗之间的时间间隔、气候因素、季节、地理区域、卫生条件和患者习惯。感染的病原体包括革兰氏阳性需氧球菌,即葡萄球菌属、链球菌属和肠球菌属,它们属于人体皮肤和黏膜的生理性菌群;革兰氏阴性兼性需氧杆菌;肠杆菌科成员(大肠杆菌、奇异变形杆菌、肺炎克雷伯菌、阴沟肠杆菌),它们在肠道生理性菌群、皮肤短暂菌群和环境中占主导地位;革兰氏阴性菌,即铜绿假单胞菌、粘质沙雷氏菌、醋酸钙不动杆菌 - 鲍曼不动杆菌复合体;与潮湿环境和灰尘相关的环境细菌;革兰氏阳性厌氧产芽孢杆菌梭菌属、革兰氏阴性无芽孢杆菌拟杆菌属和革兰氏阳性厌氧球菌;消化链球菌属和消化球菌属。后者通常定殖于肠道,主要是结肠,以及皮肤,而梭菌孢子在环境中也有发现。早期采用经验性抗生素治疗而非标准的抗生素预防。给予经验性抗菌治疗以预防全身感染、气性坏疽、软组织坏死性感染、中毒和死亡。抗生素的选择取决于推测的感染病原体和伤口的部位。在所有类型的战伤中使用5 - 7 - 10天。用于战伤的抗生素具有以下特点:抗菌谱广、能深入组织、毒性低、半衰期长、易于储存和应用且具有成本效益。使用抗生素不能替代手术治疗。根据文献数据,预期感染发生率为35% - 40%。如果手术清创延迟超过12小时,或抗生素给药超过受伤后6小时,超过50%的病例会发生战伤的原发性感染(早期感染)。预防感染的关键在于及时、彻底地对伤口进行手术探查,给予抗生素和破伤风预防,了解伤口部位可能的病原体,以及优化抗生素的选择及其使用时长。