Bacterial Contamination of the Surgical Site at the Time of Elective Caesarean Section in Belgian Blue Cows—Part 1:Identified by Bacterial Culture

To improve the efficacy of preoperative antibiotics used in elective caesarean section (CS), we aimed to identify the bacteria contaminating the surgical site during this surgery. A study was conducted on 76 Belgian Blue cows. Bacteriology was performed on cotton swab sampled from the visceral and parietal peritoneum of each cow during the CS. Most of samples showed a negative culture (55/76; 72.37%), 19/76 (25%) were positive (p < 0.0001) and two samples were contaminated. In total, 32 isolates belonging to 18 species were identified. Most of them are aerobic (17/18; 94.44%) and half of th... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Djebala, Salem
Coria, Elise
Munaut, Florian
Gille, Linde
Eppe, Justine
Moula, Nassim
Taminiau, Bernard
Daube, Georges
Bossaert, Philippe
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Reihe/Periodikum: Djebala , S , Coria , E , Munaut , F , Gille , L , Eppe , J , Moula , N , Taminiau , B , Daube , G & Bossaert , P 2022 , ' Bacterial Contamination of the Surgical Site at the Time of Elective Caesarean Section in Belgian Blue Cows—Part 1 : Identified by Bacterial Culture ' , Veterinary Sciences , vol. 9 , no. 12 , 687 . https://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci9120687
Schlagwörter: aerobic bacteria / bacterial contamination / Belgian blue cows / clean contaminated surgery / elective caesarean section / preoperative antibiotic
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-28880575
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://researchportal.unamur.be/en/publications/c4b197ab-2dd3-42b9-9282-c2c7fd3c6ebd

To improve the efficacy of preoperative antibiotics used in elective caesarean section (CS), we aimed to identify the bacteria contaminating the surgical site during this surgery. A study was conducted on 76 Belgian Blue cows. Bacteriology was performed on cotton swab sampled from the visceral and parietal peritoneum of each cow during the CS. Most of samples showed a negative culture (55/76; 72.37%), 19/76 (25%) were positive (p < 0.0001) and two samples were contaminated. In total, 32 isolates belonging to 18 species were identified. Most of them are aerobic (17/18; 94.44%) and half of them were gram-negative (G-). The most encountered bacteria were Acinetobacter sp. (6/32; 18.75%), Pseudomonas sp. (4/32; 12.5%), Aerococcus viridans (4/32; 12.5%), Psychrobacter sp. (3/32; 9.37%), and Escherichia coli (2/32; 6.25%). Among the identified isolates, 31/32 (96.87%) were aerobic and 1/32 (3.12%) was anaerobic (p = 0.0001). Furthermore, 20/32 (62.50%) strains were G− while 12/32 (37.5%) were gram-positive (G+) (p = 0.012). In fact, most of cultured strains were aerobic G− (20/32), 11/32 were aerobic G+ and 1/32 is anaerobic G+ (p < 0.0001). In conclusion, most of samples showed a negative bacteriology; however, aerobic G− strains were the most identified in positive swabs. Therefore, preoperative antibiotics should be aimed against these bacteria.