ABDOMINAL HYSTERECTOMY IN OBESE WOMEN
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 142 (4) , 532-536
Abstract
During a 25 yr period in a university hospital gynecology service, 300 obese women, weighing 200 lb or more, underwent abdominal total hysterectomy. In comparison with nonobese controls, the overweight patients were more likely to have carcinoma of the endometrium, hypertension and diabetes mellitus. Postoperatively, the most striking difference between the obese and nonobese groups was in the incidence of wound complications, with no significant difference in the occurrence of other disorders. The incidence of wound complications was 29% with obesity, 7 times that in patients of normal weight, and all types of wound disorders, except evisceration, occurred more frequently in obese patients. Among identifiable factors potentially responsible for wound infection were an increased incidence of diabetes, longer operating time and greater blood loss in overweight patients. The increased incidence of wound infection was responsible for greater febrile morbidity and the more frequent need for prolonged hospitalization. The mortality rate was 1% in the obese group and 0% in the control group, a statistically insignificant difference. Since abdominal hysterectomy in obese women is associated with increased risk of morbidity, although not necessarily of mortality, obesity per se should rarely, if ever, contraindicate necessary surgical therapy. In situations in which surgical treatment is more elective, its complications should be borne in mind.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: