| Literature DB >> 30616661 |
Juha Hautalahti1,2, Atte Joutsen3,4, Sirkka Goebeler5, Tiina Luukkaala6,7, Jahangir Khan3,8, Jari Hyttinen4, Jari Laurikka3,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stability is essential for the normal healing of a sternotomy. Mechanical vibration transmittance may provide a new means of early detection of diastasis in the sternotomy and thus enable the prevention of further complications. We sought to confirm that vibration transmittance detects sternal diastasis in human tissue.Entities:
Keywords: Electronics; Integrity; Postoperative complications; Sternotomy; Sternum; Vibration transmittance; Wound healing
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30616661 PMCID: PMC6323770 DOI: 10.1186/s13019-018-0823-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiothorac Surg ISSN: 1749-8090 Impact factor: 1.637
Descriptive characteristics of study cadavers (8 males, 2 females)
| Median | Range | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 63 | 43–78 |
| Height (cm) | 171 | 157–187 |
| Weight (kg) | 79 | 51–100 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 27.0 | 20.7–28.6 |
| Temperaturea (°C) | 19 | 16–21 |
| Post-mortem interval (days) | 5 | 2–7 |
| Soft tissue thicknessb (mean, mm) | 12.5 | 4–19 |
| Sternum thicknessb (mean, mm) | 13 | 10–21 |
aPresternal soft tissue temperature at the end of the study session
bMeasured at the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th costal level
Fig. 1Vibration transmittance measurement device. Main unit, actuator and sensor (from left to right)
Fig. 2Measurement of vibration transmittance. The sensor and actuator are held by hand and placed perpendicular in relation to the chest surface
Fig. 3An example of a vibration sweep output. Above: a vibration sweep output picked up by the accelerometer sensor according to the time. Below: the same vibration sweep results according to the measured frequencies. The gray-shaded area under the curve represents the total power integral in the 20-2000 Hz band
The median measured vibration transmittance levels (× 10− 5) in the 20 Hz – 2000 Hz band (g2)
| Intact | Stable | Unstable | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | (range) | Median | (range) | Median | (range) | |
| 2nd rib | 416 | (24–2094) | 99 | (13–2312) | 38 | (7–118) |
| 3rd rib | 346 | (36–6756) | 50 | (12–7025) | 32 | (9–78) |
| 4th rib | 305 | (65–1603) | 81 | (9–834) | 29 | (9–233) |
| Levels combined | 357 | (24–6756) | 77 | (9–7025) | 32 | (7–233) |
Stable fixation indicates the sternum is attached tightly with 6 steel wires and unstable fixation indicates a 10 mm distance between the sternal halves
The change in the median vibration transmittance between different states of the sternum (× 10− 5 g2)
| At 2nd rib | At 3rd rib | At 4rd rib | Levels combined | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intact → Stable | − 317 (− 76%) | − 296 (− 86%) | − 224 (− 73%) | − 280 (− 78%) |
| Stable → Unstable | −61 (− 61%) | − 18 (− 37%) | −52 (− 64%) | − 45 (− 58%) |
| Intact → Unstable | − 378 (− 91%) | − 314 (− 91%) | − 276 (− 91%) | − 325 (− 91%) |
Fig. 4The combined results at the 2nd, 3rd and 4th rib. Stable fixation indicates the sternum is attached tightly with 6 steel wires and unstable fixation indicates a 10 mm distance between the sternal halves
Vibration transmittance power comparisons between the three tested costal levels. Statistical comparisons were calculated from ln-transformed data using a generalized Linear Mixed Model analysis
| t-value | ||
|---|---|---|
| 3rd vs 2nd | −0.36 | 0.723 |
| 4th vs 2nd | 0.35 | 0.728 |
| 4th vs 3rd | 0.71 | 0.484 |