Literature DB >> 11994587

A retrospective analysis of 48 infected sternal wound closures: delayed closure decreases wound complications.

John T Lindsey.   

Abstract

Forty-eight patients who suffered sternal wound infections following coronary artery bypass grafting were retrospectively reviewed over a 5-year period. All patients in this study had clinical signs of major infection including redness, pain, and purulence at the time of mediastinal drainage and debridement. One patient died 11 days postoperatively because of heart failure, leaving 47 patients available for long-term follow-up. All muscle flaps (pectoralis and rectus abdominis) survived completely. All wound complications were related to chest wall skin flap dehiscence or continued infection. Seventeen of 22 patients (77 percent) undergoing flap closure 4 days or less after sternal debridement and irrigation suffered wound complications. Five of these 22 patients (23 percent) had major wound complications, meaning that the wound required more than 2 months of care before healing was complete. No major wound complications and only three minor complications (12 percent) occurred in 25 patients undergoing sternal flap closure 5 days or more after mediastinal debridement and irrigation. The frequency and severity of wound complications were significantly decreased in the group of patients undergoing sternal flap closure 5 or more days after sternal drainage and debridement (p < 0.00005). In the majority of cases [29 of 47 (62 percent)], secure sternal wound closure was obtained with a single, split, medially based, right pectoralis major muscle flap.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11994587     DOI: 10.1097/00006534-200205000-00015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg        ISSN: 0032-1052            Impact factor:   4.730


  4 in total

1.  Risk factors for complications after reconstructive surgery for sternal wound infection.

Authors:  Ichiro Hashimoto; Mitsuru Takaku; Shinji Matsuo; Yoshiro Abe; Hiroshi Harada; Hiroaki Nagae; Yusuke Fujioka; Kuniaki Anraku; Kiichi Inagawa; Hideki Nakanishi
Journal:  Arch Plast Surg       Date:  2014-05-12

2.  Secondary omental and pectoralis major double flap reconstruction following aggressive sternectomy for deep sternal wound infections after cardiac surgery.

Authors:  Toshiro Kobayashi; Akihito Mikamo; Hiroshi Kurazumi; Ryo Suzuki; Bungo Shirasawa; Kimikazu Hamano
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2011-04-18       Impact factor: 1.637

Review 3.  Poststernotomy mediastinitis: a classification to initiate and evaluate reconstructive management based on evidence from a structured review.

Authors:  Jan J van Wingerden; Dirk T Ubbink; Chantal M A M van der Horst; Bas A J M de Mol
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2014-11-23       Impact factor: 1.637

Review 4.  Sternal reconstruction after post-sternotomy mediastinitis.

Authors:  Pankaj Kaul
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2017-11-02       Impact factor: 1.637

  4 in total

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