Hospital-Acquired COVID-19 Infection Increases Morbidity and Mortality: A Case Report of Post-Surgical Challenge of Duodenal Ulcer Repair During COVID-19 Era.
Cureus
; 14(2): e22646, 2022 Feb.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-35371774
Hospital-acquired infections are nosocomially acquired infections that are not present or incubating at the time of admission to a hospital. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many hospitals became sources of the infection, creating a great challenge for health care providers and uninfected patients who visited these hospitals seeking medical or surgical advice. We are presenting a middle-aged man who complained of abdominal pain associated with poor oral intake during the COVID-19 pandemic in January 2021. After being diagnosed with a perforated duodenal ulcer, he underwent laparoscopic repair. He was postoperatively referred to interventional radiology for central line insertion. However, as one of the pre-procedure perquisites during the COVID-19 pandemic, he underwent a nasopharyngeal swab real-time PCR test, which was positive for COVID-19 infection to be considered hospital-acquired. This article shows how the pandemic may complicate the post-surgical condition, increasing patient morbidity and mortality.
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MEDLINE
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2022
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Article