Doxycycline in abdominal surgery
R. A. Klein, D. F. Busch, S. E. Wilson, D. J. Flora and S. M. Finegold
Twenty patients undergoing urgent or emergency surgical procedures where
intra-abdominal infection was suspected were treated with doxycycline
hyclate. Wound infections involving anaerobic, aerobic, or facultative
bacteria developed in four of 11 patients treated with doxycycline alone.
Nine other patients received higher doses of doxycycline plus gentamicin
sulfate. Five of these had postoperative infections primarily involving
anaerobic organisms. Bacteremia with a doxycycline-resistant Bacteroides
fragilis developed in one patient during therapy. Serum levels of
doxycycline, even at the higher dosage, were below the minimal inhibitory
concentrations (MICs) of a number of potential pathogens isolated at the
time of surgery. Doxycycline is not indicated in cases of serious
intra-abdominal infection unless the infecting flora are known to be
susceptible.