View clinical trials related to Elective Colorectal Surgery.
Filter by:Complications due to infection after colorectal surgery are frequent, affecting up to 25% of patients. Infection increases mortality, lengthens hospital stays, increases costs and decreases long term survival for cancer patients. Perioperative inflammation leads to hypercatabolism, denutrition and immunosuppression, all of which are associated to postoperative infection. Data from various sources suggests that modulating perioperative inflammatory response through the injection of corticosteroids would benefit the patient by reducing the number of postoperative complications after major surgery. Pre- or perioperative intravenous administration of a single corticosteroid flash is a means of modulating systemic inflammation that has been suggested for numerous types of surgeries, including pancreatic surgery. The objective of this study is to assess whether a preoperative single corticosteroid flash (methylprednisolone: 20 mg/kg IV at anesthetic induction) reduces the risk of serious complications after elective colorectal surgery.
During the creation of an ileostomy, a bridge device is systematically placed in an aim to reduce wound and peritoneal contamination by stools. Nevertheless no evidence was reported to justify this issue. Moreover the placement of a bridge device increases the difficulty of nurse cares and is associated with its own morbidity.
To assess the effects of a combined antimicrobial prophylaxis using oral ornidazole (the day before surgery) and intravenous cephalosporin (before surgical incision) with that of intravenous cephalosporin alone (standard of care) in combination with oral placebo on the incidence of SSI within 30 days after elective colorectal surgery.