Here’s a concise summary with rationale for antibiotic use in road traffic accidents (RTA):
1. Open Fractures
- Type I–II: Cefazolin (1st-gen cephalosporin).
🔹 Rationale: covers skin flora (Staph/Strep); adequate for low-contamination injuries. - Type III (severe, contaminated): Cefazolin + Gentamicin ± Metronidazole.
🔹 Rationale: add Gram-negative + anaerobic cover due to high contamination risk.
2. Abdominal Trauma
- 3rd-gen cephalosporin (e.g., Ceftriaxone) + Metronidazole
OR Piperacillin–Tazobactam alone.
🔹 Rationale: broad Gram-negative and anaerobic coverage for bowel injuries.
3. Head Trauma
- Closed injury: No prophylaxis.
- Open/penetrating: Cefazolin or Ceftriaxone ± Vancomycin.
🔹 Rationale: cover skin flora and prevent CNS infection with open wounds.
4. Chest Trauma
- Closed injury / chest tube only: No prophylaxis.
- Penetrating: Cefazolin or Cefuroxime.
🔹 Rationale: prevent empyema/infection from skin flora.
5. Soft Tissue / Crush Injuries
- Cefazolin ± Metronidazole if gross contamination.
🔹 Rationale: basic Gram-positive cover; add anaerobic cover when soil/devitalized tissue present.
6. Burns
- No systemic prophylaxis (use topical agents; systemic only if infection).
🔹 Rationale: prophylaxis does not reduce infection or mortality; promotes resistance.
General Rules
- Single agent (Cefazolin) → adequate for most simple, clean, or mildly contaminated injuries.
- Dual/Triple therapy → reserve for severe contamination, abdominal penetration, or high-risk open fractures.
- Duration: Single perioperative dose to ≤48h (unless established infection).
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Principle:
- Use narrow, short-course prophylaxis where possible.
- Escalate only if gross contamination or visceral injury.
Hossam Elgnainy Selected answer as best
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