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Clinical Outcomes of Hospital-Acquired Acute Cholecystitis in the ElderlyClinical Outcomes of Hospital-Acquired Acute Cholecystitis in the Elderly

Other Titles
Clinical Outcomes of Hospital-Acquired Acute Cholecystitis in the Elderly
Authors
봉지훈장동기이준규고유진김병연박성연정재우이상협
Issue Date
Oct-2017
Publisher
대한췌장담도학회
Keywords
Acute cholecystitis; Gallstones; Nosocomial infections; Antimicrobial resistance; Elderly
Citation
대한췌담도학회지, v.22, no.4, pp 172 - 178
Pages
7
Indexed
KCICANDI
Journal Title
대한췌담도학회지
Volume
22
Number
4
Start Page
172
End Page
178
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/16937
ISSN
1976-3573
2288-0941
Abstract
Background/Aim: Antimicrobials for nosocomial infections are generally chosen discriminately from community-acquired diseases from concerns for resistance to which the elderly are highly exposed. The elderly are affected frequently by acute cholecystitis (AC), for which appropriate antimicrobial therapy is particularly important. Also, cholecystectomy for elderly patients with co-morbidities is expectedly not as feasible as for uncomplicated young patients. Characteristics of hospital-acquired AC in the elderly patients were investigated in this study. Methods: Records of patients over 65 years and older diagnosed with AC between March 2006 and February 2015 were reviewed retrospectively. Hospital-acquired AC was defined as development of AC in patients who were admitted for other disorders. Community-acquired AC was defined as presence of AC at the time of admission. Community-acquired AC group (CG) was used as a control group that was matched for age and sex with a ratio of 1:2. Results: There were 40 patients in hospital-acquired AC group (HG) and 80 in CG. Demographics did not differ except higher prevalence of underlying illnesses in HG. Necessity to change initial antimicrobials for worsening conditions was more common in HG than in CG (20.0% vs. 2.5%, p < 0.01). Time to recovery was longer in HG (23.3 ± 5.6 days vs. 10.1 ± 0.7 days, p = 0.02). Rate of early cholecystectomy was lower (7.5% vs. 40.0%, p < 0.01) and that of open conversion was higher (20.0% vs. 6.3%, p = 0.02) in HG. Conclusions: For the elderly patients with hospital-acquired AC, antimicrobial and surgical management should be performed more meticulously since they showed distinct characteristics.
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