The after-treatment of celiotomy is usually very simple. A special nurse is required for the first three days. The patient should lie upon her back for the first two or three days; after this she may be moved partly upon either side, and a pillow may be placed behind her for support. The head may be supported by one or two pillows. Much comfort is experienced by raising the knees over pillows. The patient often complains bitterly of backache, which may be relieved by slipping a folded sheet or towel under the small of the back. Thirst is always present after celiotomy, and is usually the symptom of which the patient complains the most. There is much diversity of practice in regard to the administration of water after celiotomy. The writer allows no water during the first twenty-four hours. During this time the lips and mouth are frequently moistened with a cloth wet in cold water or wrapped about a piece of ice. At the end of twenty-four hours small quantities of hot water or cold soda-water (1 dram) are given every fifteen minutes or half hour, and gradually increased as it is found to be retained by the stomach. Hot water relieves thirst as well, and is not so likely to cause vomiting, as cold water. The chief objection to the early administration of water after celiotomy is that it may cause vomiting. Some operators avoid this by administering the water by the rectum. Another reason, more or less theoretical, for withholding water is that the absorbing power of the peritoneum Pain after celiotomy seems to bear no relation whatever to the amount of traumatism that has been inflicted. More discomfort may be experienced after ventro-suspension of the uterus than after a hysterectomy. In operations upon the generative organs the chief seat of pain is in the region of the sacrum. Pain is also felt in the ovarian region and in the abdominal incision. The pain begins to abate after the first fifteen or twenty hours. Opium should not be administered unless it is absolutely necessary to allay nervous excitement in a cowardly woman. In such a case a small dose (gr. ?) of morphine may be administered hypodermically. The writer rarely finds it necessary to administer an anodyne. Most patients are able to endure the pain if they are properly encouraged by the physician and the nurse. There are several objections to the administration of opium. It increases the thirst and it diminishes the functional activity of the gastro-intestinal tract. It retards the passage of flatus by the rectum and causes tympanites, and it increases the difficulty of moving the bowels. It obscures and delays the recognition of symptoms that may demand immediate treatment. The patient who has had no opium is more comfortable at the end of three or four days after celiotomy than one to whom it has been given. The patient should be encouraged to pass water voluntarily. The application of hot moist cloths to the external genitals sometimes facilitates urination. In many cases the use of the catheter is never necessary. If the urine is not voided about every eight hours, it should be drawn with the catheter. Catheterization should be done with strict attention to asepsis. The former frequency of cystitis from the improper use of the catheter has already been referred to. Catheterization should never be performed under any circumstances by the aid of the The catheter may be lubricated with sterilized oil or glycerin. The labia should be separated, and the vestibule and the external meatus should be wiped off with a solution of bichloride of mercury (1:2000). After the catheter has been used once it should be thoroughly cleansed, inside and out, and sterilized by boiling before being replaced in the carbolic solution. The secretion of urine is always diminished for a few days after celiotomy, probably on account of the restricted ingestion of fluids. The writer has found the average secretion in 111 cases of celiotomy on women to be, during the first twenty-four hours, 13.4 ounces; during the second twenty-four hours, 14.6 ounces; during the third twenty-four hours, 19.6 ounces. In considering these numbers it should be remembered that the gynecological patient passes, before operation, a daily amount of urine much less than that passed by the average healthy woman. Food is usually first administered at the end of forty-eight hours. If the patient be feeble, nutriment may be given by the mouth or the rectum before this time. The patient may have any easily digested food that she wishes, such as buttermilk, soup, beef-tea, milk or milk and lime-water, soft-boiled egg, etc. The food should be given frequently in small quantities. Buttermilk is one of the best foods with which to begin. It gratifies thirst and is more readily digested than milk. Half an ounce to an ounce may be given every hour until the retentive power of the stomach is determined. The bowels should be moved at the end of forty-eight or seventy-two hours. If the patient is uncomfortable and is unable to pass flatus freely, or if there is any abdominal distention, the purgative should be administered at the earlier time (forty-eight hours). If she is comfortable Sometimes the bowels are more difficult to move, and it is necessary to repeat the rectal injection at intervals of two or three hours until a good movement is produced. A compound enema composed of Epsom salts ?j, glycerin ?j, turpentine ?iss, water ?viij, injected high in the bowel through a rectal tube, may be effective. If the Rochelle salts are not retained, or if they fail to act, 1 grain of calomel may be administered every hour for five or six hours. If the patient does well, vomiting does not often occur after the first twenty-four hours, when the effects of the ether have passed off. When vomiting occurs later than this, it is usually accompanied by abdominal distention and general abdominal pain. It is then an alarming symptom, and may indicate the onset of intestinal paralysis and general peritonitis. This group of symptoms (vomiting, general abdominal pain, and distention) demands immediate treatment. A hot mustard plaster or a turpentine stupe should be placed over the epigastrium, and an enema of 1 pint of water and ½ ounce of turpentine should be administered, and should be repeated every three or four hours until a fecal movement occurs and flatus is freely discharged. At the same time Rochelle salts should be administered, or, if there is persistent vomiting, 1-grain doses of calomel. The escape of flatus may be assisted by inserting a rectal tube. In case of moderate distention or of intestinal pain from inability to pass flatus, the insertion in the The patient is sometimes able to pass flatus when upon her side, though she may not be able to do so upon her back. Inability to pass flatus is not necessarily a sign of peritonitis or intestinal paralysis. It may be caused by the unaccustomed position, or pain or nervousness may prevent the woman relaxing the sphincter ani. If the vomiting persists and becomes bilious, relief is sometimes obtained by thoroughly washing out the stomach through the stomach-tube. The internal administration of medicines—except the purgatives already mentioned—is of little use in vomiting of this character. The pulse after celiotomy usually remains below 100. It often, however, reaches 115 or 120, and sometimes higher, in patients who have a favorable convalescence. A rapid pulse unaccompanied by unfavorable abdominal symptoms often indicates some heart-trouble. A pulse of over 120 accompanied by abdominal distention and vomiting should always excite alarm. Strychnine and digitalis, administered hypodermically, are the most useful medicines for strengthening the heart and diminishing the rapidity of the pulse. They should be given in large doses—1/20 of a grain of strychnine every three or four hours, and 10 minims of tincture of digitalis at similar intervals. Hypodermic injections of strychnine are most useful for shock after celiotomy. This drug may be exhibited until the physiological action—twitching or jerking of the muscles—is observed. The writer has administered between 1 and 2 grains during the first twenty-four hours after celiotomy, with recovery. The temperature after celiotomy runs no regular course. It usually remains below 102° F. A greater elevation of The temperature often rises on account of very trivial causes. It may go up one or two degrees if the patient should become constipated, and will drop as soon as a free fecal movement has taken place. Fig. 207.—Composite temperature-chart of a series of 150 successful cases of celiotomy: average temperatures, pulses, and respirations for two weeks after operation. The comfort of the patient is much increased by sponging the arms and legs with tepid water. The nurse The patient should maintain the recumbent posture for three weeks after celiotomy. She may then sit up in bed for two or three days, and if then sufficiently strong, she may leave the bed. Too great haste in getting up may result in ventral hernia. The incision should be strapped with adhesive plaster for five or six weeks after operation, and the woman should wear some simple form of abdominal binder for the following six months, or for a year if the incision be large. She should be warned against resuming hard work, involving lifting or other abdominal strain, for several months after operation. She should be told of the possibility of ventral hernia, and advised to return immediately for treatment should this condition appear. The usual causes of death after celiotomy are peritonitis and hemorrhage. The frequency of hemorrhage as a cause of death is often overlooked. The writer feels confident that many deaths which, without post-mortem examination, are attributed to peritonitis, are really caused by hemorrhage. Without doubt, peritonitis and hemorrhage often occur together; the blood that escapes into the peritoneal cavity may be too great in amount for absorption, and may become septic. The source of the hemorrhage is usually a vessel of the pedicle that escapes from the embrace of an imperfectly applied ligature. This accident should not happen if the operator is careful to see that hemostasis is perfect before the abdomen is closed. Bloody oozing from a surface of adhesion is not sufficient to cause death, and may be removed by drainage; the fatal hemorrhage comes from an arterial vessel that has slipped from its ligature. All ligatured vessels should be finally inspected immediately before the abdomen is closed. If a stump is not perfectly dry, a reinforcing ligature should be applied. Care in this particular will save much subsequent anxiety. If the operator knows that his ligatures have been securely applied, he If the symptoms of the patient after celiotomy indicate hemorrhage, the abdomen must be reopened and the bleeding vessels secured. The causes of peritonitis after celiotomy have already been discussed. The common symptoms are rapid pulse, abdominal distention and pain with inability to pass flatus or feces, and vomiting, which may finally become stercoraceous. The temperature is usually elevated, though it may remain normal or subnormal. Auscultation of the abdomen reveals total absence of all peristaltic sounds. If these symptoms are not arrested by the use of purgatives, turpentine enemata, and the rectal tube, it is probable that the result will be fatal. Death usually occurs on the third day. The mortality after celiotomy depends upon the condition to be treated, the skill of the operator, and the environment of the operation. Some operations, like ventro-suspension of the uterus, are attended by no mortality. The average mortality after celiotomy for large numbers of gynecological cases of all kinds, in the hands of experienced operators with good operative surroundings, is about 5 per cent. |