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After an operation, bacteria can enter the organism from the intestine. Combat special cells of the immune system that are located in the liver. Illustration Credit: Mercedes Gomez de Agüero |
Darmbacteria are more common triggers of complications after surgery. This is shown by a new study by research teams from Würzburg and Bern. A solution to this problem could come from the liver.
German hospitals carried out almost 16 million operations in 2021. In Switzerland there are around 1.1 million. Even if the actual procedure is going well, it is not uncommon for a wound infection to occur afterwards, which can have dramatic consequences for those affected. In extreme cases, such infections are fatal.
A new study now shows that the causes of these infections are in a large part of the cases bacteria from the patient's intestine itself. To do this, the intestine does not even have to be injured during the operation. In this way, too, these pathogens overcome the intestinal barrier postoperatively and spread throughout the body through the blood and lymphatic pathways. They can be stopped by special immune cells that patrol all organs, including the liver.