Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
The incidence of HIV infection has been stable in USA, at approximately 20–30 newly diagnosed infections per 100,000 population per y.
20–25% of HIV infected pts will require surgery.
Major risk factors: Neutropenia, yeast overgrowth, and/or nosocomial colonization of skin and mucosa.
In one study of AIDS pts undergoing intraabdominal surgery, 22.2% 30-d mortality was reported.
Mortality is greatest at the extremes of age.
Greatest source of morbidity and mortality is secondary to infection.
Pneumonia accounts for approximately 40% of all deaths.
Increased incidence of postop pneumonia, wound infection, postop sepsis, respiratory insufficiency, SIRS, and hypotension due to cardiovascular instability.
Increased healing time.
Nosocomial transmission of infection
Interactions with other drugs (IV recreational drugs, antiviral agents)
Transmission of pathogenic drug-resistant strains of microbial agents to medical personnel (e.g., new strains of tuberculosis)
Decreased pulm reserve due to repeated infections
Decreased myocardial reserve secondary to underlying disease and generalized poor health
Translocation of intestinal bacteria due to severe mucositis
Immune suppression can arise from multiple causes, both primary and acquired.
In the intraop period, surgical trauma, anesthetic agents, blood transfusion with or without severe hemorrhage decreases the immune response.
Primary immune deficiency (most are familial).
The very young have immature immune systems.
Aging alters some cellular immune responses.
Acquired:
Malnutrition, drugs (glucocorticoids, chemotherapy, antiviral), massive burns, or trauma
Cancers (leukemia, lymphoma, and multiple myeloma)
Infections (HIV stages 2–4, influenza, sepsis)
Smoking decreases respiratory defense mechanisms
Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles
If you are a member. Log in here