Abdominal Sepsis in Surgery and does this "Diagnosis" Really Exist? Effective Surgical Therapy

Authors

  • José Luis García Hernández Specialist in Surgery. Attached to the Department of Surgery General Hospital Iztapalapa “Dr. Juan Ramón de la Fuente" of the Ministry of Health of Mexico City. Graduated from the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Mexico City. Country Mexico
  • Morelos Adolfo García Sánchez Specialist in Surgery and with a Subspecialty in Colon and Rectal Surgery attached to the Department of Surgery of the of Surgery General Hospital "Dr. Rubén Leñero" of the Ministry of Health of Mexico City. Graduated from the National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico City. Country: Mexico
  • Gema Méndez Barrón Specialist in Surgery. Attached to the Department of Surgery General Hospital "Dr. Rubén Leñero" of the Ministry of Health of Mexico City. Graduated from the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Mexico City. Country Mexico
  • Ivonne Alondra León Suárez Specialist in Surgery. Attached to the Department of Surgery General Hospital "Dr. Rubén Leñero" of the Ministry of Health of Mexico City. Graduated from the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Mexico City. Country Mexico
  • José de Jesús Urbina Cabello Specialist in Surgery. Attached to the Department of Surgery General Hospital “Dr. Rubén Leñero" of the Ministry of Health of Mexico City. Graduated from the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Mexico City. Country Mexico

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14738/bjhr.1202.18728

Keywords:

Abdominal sepsis, Infection, Surgery, Systemic inflammatory response, Chemical peritonitis, Immunological peritonitis

Abstract

Introduction: the medical area presents an accelerated advance in knowledge, as well as in technology, which has caused empty gaps that confuse, transcend and are filled or transformed into fiction or unfounded criteria; the specialty of Surgery tends to this phenomenon. Objective: 7 years of experience in the treatment of patients with abdominal sepsis in 3 hospitals. Method: a multicenter, retrospective, longitudinal, observational and descriptive study was conducted to review the records of patients surgically treated for abdominal sepsis over a period of 7 years. Results: 353 patients with abdominal sepsis treated surgically; 243 men (69%), 110 women (31%), with an age range of 18 to 81, mean 42; the first cause is biliary pathology, in 22.94% it does not start with an infectious process, diabetes mellitus occupies the 1st place as comorbidity 39%. Morbidity of 79% and mortality of 23.51%. Discussion: most deaths are caused by the "host response to the infection itself", it is not supported by evidence; this not only skews the science used to model it, but also the approaches to treat it, the accurate diagnosis of infectious diseases is a complex process influenced by factors such as clinical judgment, diagnostic methods and the availability of resources. Conclusions: abdominal sepsis (infectious) does not exist as a real diagnosis, but is an inflammatory process of the individual, complex, multifactorial, where incorrect diagnosis and treatment impact the patient's life. In Mexico, a real situational diagnosis of the health sector must be carried out and a reengineering of processes in the quality of medical-surgical, administrative and research care must be carried out to initiate a beneficial/correct, efficient, effective change in mortality erroneously called abdominal sepsis.

Downloads

Published

2025-04-25

How to Cite

Hernández, J. L. G., Sánchez, M. A. G., Barrón, G. M., Suárez, I. A. L., & Cabello, J. de J. U. (2025). Abdominal Sepsis in Surgery and does this "Diagnosis" Really Exist? Effective Surgical Therapy. British Journal of Healthcare and Medical Research, 12(02), 449–469. https://doi.org/10.14738/bjhr.1202.18728

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 1 2 3