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Delayed primary versus late secondary wound closure in the treatment of postsurgical sternum osteomyelitis
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 1194467
Author(s) Berdajs, Denis A; Trampuz, Andrej; Ferrari, Enrico; Ruchat, Patrick; Hurni, Michel; von Segesser, Ludwig K
Author(s) at UniBasel Trampuz, Andrej
Year 2011
Title Delayed primary versus late secondary wound closure in the treatment of postsurgical sternum osteomyelitis
Journal Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery
Volume 12
Number 6
Pages / Article-Number 914-8
Keywords Surgical site infections, Mediastinitis, Poststernotomy infection, Surgical complications
Abstract Sternal osteomyelitis and poststernotomy mediastinitis is a severe and life-threatening complication after the cardiac surgery. The incidence ranges up to 3% with a mortality rate up to 29%. In addition, postoperative infections after sternotomy are associated with prolonged hospital stay, increased healthcare costs and impaired quality of patient life, representing an economic and social burden. The emergence of increasing antimicrobial resistant bacteria augments the importance of postsurgical infections since the antimicrobial choices are becoming limited. Furthermore, the incidence of infection is an indicator for the quality of patient care in the international benchmark studies. Although several therapy strategies are nowadays present in clinical practice, there is a lack of evidence-based surgical consensus for treatment of this surgical complication. In most cases the poststernotomy mediastinitis involves surgical revision with debridement, open dressing and/or vacuum-assisted therapy. After the granulation tissue on open chest wound is achieved, secondary closure and/or reconstruction with vascularized soft tissue flaps, such as omentum or pectoral muscle is performed. It seems there is a need for more effective surgical treatment of poststernotomy wound infections, which may address the prolonged hospitalization and reduce the number of surgical interventions and with this also the perioperative morbidity. In light of this we propose a randomized study comparing new delayed primary closure of the sternum to the secondary vacuum-assisted closure.
Publisher Oxford Univ. Press
ISSN/ISBN 1569-9285
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6004683
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1510/icvts.2010.263483
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21372144
ISI-Number WOS:000309997000007
Document type (ISI) Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Randomized Controlled Trial
 
   

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