J Korean Assoc Oral Maxillofac Surg.  2008 Oct;34(5):562-570.

Bacteriologic Features Investigaed by Aspiration technique in Oral and Maxillofacial Infections

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Oral and Maxillofacial surgery, College of Medicine, Inha University, Korea. kik@inha.ac.kr

Abstract

Most purulent maxillofacial infections are of odontogenic origin. Treatment of infection includes the surgical intervention, such as incision and drainage, and adjunctive treatment. The use of high-dose antibiotics is also indicated. The choice of an antibiotics should be based on the knowledge of the usual causative microbes and the results of antibacterial sensitivity test. We have undertaken clinical studies on 119 patients in Dept. of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Inha University Hospital from January 2000 to December 2007. Many anaerobic microbes are killed quickly when exposed to oxygen. Thus the needle aspiration techniques and the transfer under inert gas were used when culturing. The aim of this study was to obtain informations for the bacteriologic features and the effective antimicrobial therapy against maxillofaical odontogenic infections. The obtained results were as follows: 1. The most frequent causes of infections were odontogenic (88.3%), and in odontogenic cause, pulpal infections were the most common causes(53.8%). 2. The buccal and submandibular spaces (respectively 23.5%) were the most frequent involved fascial spaces, followed by masticator spaces (14.3%). 3. The most common underlying medical problems were diabetes (17.6%), however the relation with prognosis was not discovered. 4. The complications were the expiry, mediastinitis, necrotizing fasciitis, orbital abscess, and osteomyelitis. 5. The most common admission periods were 1-2 weeks, and the most patients were discharged within 3 weeks. However, patients who admitted over 5 weeks were about 10%. 6. A total of 99 bacterial strains (1.1 strains per abscess) was isolated from 93 patients (78.2%). The most common bacterium isolated was Streptococcus viridans (46.2%), followed by beta-hemolytic group streptococcus (10.1%). 7. Penicillins (penicillin G 58.3%, oxacillin 80.0%, ampicillin 80.0%) have slightly lower sensitivity. Thus we recommend the antibiotics, such as glycopeptides (teicoplanin 100%, vancomycin 100%) and quinolones (ciprofloxacin 90.0%) which have high susceptibility in cases in which penicillin therapy failed or severe infections.

Keyword

Odontogenic infeciton; Microbiology; Fascial space; Aspiration technique

MeSH Terms

Abscess
Ampicillin
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Drainage
Fasciitis, Necrotizing
Glycopeptides
Humans
Mediastinitis
Needles
Orbit
Osteomyelitis
Oxacillin
Oxygen
Penicillins
Prognosis
Quinolones
Streptococcus
Surgery, Oral
Vancomycin
Viridans Streptococci
Ampicillin
Anti-Bacterial Agents
Glycopeptides
Oxacillin
Oxygen
Penicillins
Quinolones
Vancomycin
Full Text Links
  • JKAOMS
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr