Preoperative vaginal cleansing with chlorhexidine solution in preventing post‐cesarean section infections in a low resource setting: A randomized controlled trial

Introduction Infection is one of the most common causes of maternal morbidities and mortality and has been reported to be responsible for about 15% of maternal deaths. Any woman is at risk of infection during childbirth, but women undergoing cesarean section are at higher risk. Improvement in surgic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica 2021-04, Vol.100 (4), p.694-703
Hauptverfasser: Ogah, Christian O., Anikwe, Chidebe C., Ajah, Leonard O., Ikeotuonye, Arinze C., Lawani, Osaheni L., Okorochukwu, Bartholomew C., Ikeoha, Cyril C., Okoroafor, Francis C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction Infection is one of the most common causes of maternal morbidities and mortality and has been reported to be responsible for about 15% of maternal deaths. Any woman is at risk of infection during childbirth, but women undergoing cesarean section are at higher risk. Improvement in surgical procedures with asepsis and the use of antibiotics have helped reduce postoperative infectious morbidities. However, ascending infection from the lower to the upper genital tract is a common but often neglected source of infection. Cleaning the vagina with chlorhexidine antiseptic solution before cesarean section can be a cheap and affordable source of infection control. This study is aimed at evaluating the efficacy of preoperative vaginal cleansing using 1.0% chlorhexidine in the reduction of post‐cesarean section infectious morbidities. Material and methods This prospective randomized control trial was conducted among 322 pregnant women who underwent an emergency cesarean section at Alex Ekwueme Federal University Teaching Hospital, Abakaliki (AE‐FUTHA). The women were randomized into two groups. The interventional group received vaginal cleansing with three standard gauzes soaked in 30 mL 1.0% chlorhexidine gluconate solution preoperatively in addition to surgical skin cleaning with chlorhexidine‐alcohol. The women in the control group only had surgical skin cleaning with chlorhexidine‐alcohol. All the women received pre‐ and postoperative antibiotics. The primary outcomes were endometritis and wound infections. Results Infectious morbidity was significantly reduced from 36.8% in the control group to 12.0% in the intervention group (P = .001). Endometritis occurred significantly less frequently in the intervention group than the control group (respectively 6.6% compared with 27.6%: relative risk [RR] 0.29, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.16‐0.53; P 
ISSN:0001-6349
1600-0412
DOI:10.1111/aogs.14060