Acute Generalized Peritonitis in a Peripheral Hospital Centre in Benin: Can It Be Managed by a Local General Practitioner?
Author(s) -
Sèmèvo Romaric Tobome,
Adrien Montcho Hodonou,
Anifa Wahide,
Kadiri Alassan Boukari,
Moïse Kponou,
Christelle Hermione Elvire Bankole,
Roberto Caronna
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
surgery research and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.777
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 2356-7759
pISSN - 2356-6124
DOI - 10.1155/2021/5543869
Subject(s) - medicine , peritonitis , context (archaeology) , perforation , surgery , retrospective cohort study , general surgery , paleontology , materials science , metallurgy , punching , biology
Background Acute generalized peritonitis in resource-poor countries is still a health challenge due to late diagnosis, surgical delay, and specialists' unavailability. These are the foremost determinants of surgical morbidity and mortality. We report the experience of a peripheral hospital in Benin not equipped with specialized surgeons.Methods This is an observational, retrospective, and descriptive study including patients operated for acute generalized peritonitis at the Atacora Departmental Hospital Centre, Benin, where unfortunately CT scan and intensive care unit are still not available. Most of surgical activities were performed by a general practitioner with previous surgical training (but no surgical specialization). Age, gender, cause of peritonitis, surgical procedures, and postoperative outcome were evaluated.Results Sixty-three patients were included. The mean age was 23.2 years and sex ratio M/F 1.5. The mean surgical delay was 26 hours (range: 6–92 hours). An ileal typhoid perforation was found in 40 patients (63.5%), and 35 of them (87.5%) underwent a primary perforation repair without bowel resection. 73% of surgical procedures were performed by the general practitioner. Morbidity was 34.9% and mortality was 14.3%. The average postoperative hospital stay was 12 days (range: 11–82 days). These results were comparable to those observed in the subgroup of patients (17 cases) operated by the general surgeons (morbidity 32.6%, mortality 13.0%, and average postoperative hospital stay 11 days, range: 1–58 days).Conclusion Acute generalized peritonitis requires urgent management, and it can be effectively carried out, in a context of limited resources, by a general practitioner with surgical skills.
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