Are postoperative intravenous antibiotics necessary after bimaxillary
orthognathic surgery? A prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
clinical trial.
Author(s): Tan SK, Lo J, Zwahlen RA.
Affiliation(s): Dept. of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
SAR, PR China.
Publication date & source: 2011, Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg. , 40(12):1363-8
Postoperative antibiotic prophylaxis is often administered intravenously, despite
an increased morbidity rate compared with oral application. This study
investigates whether a postoperative oral antibiotic regimen is as effective as
incorporation of intravenous antibiotics after bimaxillary orthognathic surgery.
42 patients who underwent bimaxillary orthognathic surgery between December 2008
and May 2010 were randomly allocated to 2 placebo-controlled postoperative
antibiotic prophylaxis groups. Group 1 received oral amoxicillin 500mg three
times daily; group 2 received intravenous ampicillin 1g four times daily, during
the first two postoperative days. Both groups subsequently took oral amoxicillin
for three more days. Clinically, the infection rate was assessed in both study
groups for a period of 6 weeks after the surgery. 9 patients (21.4%) developed
infection. No adverse drug event was detected. No significant difference (p=0.45)
was detected in the infection rate between group 1 (3/21) and group 2 (6/21).
Age, type of surgical procedures, duration of the operative procedure, surgical
procedure-related events, blood loss, and blood transfusion were all found not
related to infection (p>0.05). Administration of more cost-effective oral
antibiotic prophylaxis, which causes less comorbidity, can be considered to be
safe in bimaxillary orthognathic surgery with segmentalizations.
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