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Four patients with postoperative mediastinitis who were treated by omentopexy at the Fukuoka University Hospital between 1989 and 1990. Three of the 4 patients healed successfully, another one died of multiple organ failure 83 days after surgery. All patients were received coronary artery bypass surgery harvesting a left internal thoracic artery for ischemic heart disease. Three patients had diabetes mellitus, one patient had renal failure preoperatively. Recognition of mediastinitis was made by sternal wound purulent discharge and sternal dehiscence. Culture of the discharge fluid yielded methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in three, and Enterococcus cloacae in one. Irrigation with popidone-iodine or blonopol were ineffective. Thus, the wound was treated with debridement and omentopexy with an omental pedicle flap, respectively. Postoperative course after omentopexy were excellent, had no complications. We conclude that the omentopexy is useful in the treatment of postoperative refractory anterior mediastinitis.
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PMID:[Treatment of postoperative mediastinitis using an omental pedicle flap]. 143 54

A 57-year-old man had suffered from poorly controlled diabetes mellitus and liver cirrhosis due to alcohol and hepatitis C for about 10 years. He developed fever and swelling of the right cheek and neck due to periodontal infection. The symptoms worsened in spite of antibiotic therapy and were accompanied by dyspnea. He was therefore referred to our hospital. Chest radiographs and computed tomographs revealed widening of the superior mediastinum, pulmonary infiltrates and right pleural effusion. He was diagnosed as having mediastinitis, right pyothorax and pneumonia caused by periodontal infection. Tracheotomy and mechanical ventilation were performed. Antibiotic therapy resulted in improvement of the mediastinitis and pyothorax. However, renal and liver dysfunction developed and the patient died of multiorgan failure after 35 days of hospitalization. Death due to periodontal infection is rare. We give a review of the literature.
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PMID:[A fatal case of acute mediastinitis caused by periodontal infection]. 146 87

Bacterial mediastinal abscess or mediastinitis developed in nine (2.5%) of 361 consecutive patients who underwent isolated heart transplantation at the Texas Heart Institute. All nine patients had at least one predisposing factor that may have contributed to the development of mediastinitis. These included insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, repeat operation for postoperative mediastinal hemorrhage, Staphylococcus aureus pneumonitis, and cardiac allograft rejection in the early postoperative period (less than 30 days), necessitating steroid pulse therapy alone or in combination with murine-derived monoclonal antibody (OKT3). In six of the nine patients, the diagnosis of mediastinitis was made on the basis of clinical findings (unstable sternum and incisional erythema, with or without gross purulence), and in the other three patients, diagnosis was confirmed by computed tomography of the chest. Culture data were unequivocal in all patients; S. aureus was the most frequent (five patients), followed by S. epidermidis (two patients), and Enterobacter cloacae (two patients). Computed tomography-directed percutaneous drainage and systemic antibiotics were successful in treating two of three patients who had stable sternums with mediastinal abscess. In the remaining seven patients, sternal and mediastinal debridement with rewiring of the sternum was successfully applied. No patient required muscle or omental flap coverage, and no patient experienced a recurrence of mediastinitis during an average follow-up period of 35 months (range, 12 to 46 months).
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PMID:Bacterial mediastinitis after heart transplantation. 1506 16

To determine the incidence, the mortality, the risk factors and the most appropriate method for treatment of sternal infections, 9,742 charts were reviewed retrospectively of patients having undergone a sternotomy for cardiac surgery at the Montreal Heart Institute. One hundred and eleven sternal infections (1.1%) were identified: 55 (0.57%) superficial, 56 (0.57%) profound (mediastinitis). The treatment for these profound infections was either debridement, open or closed with drainage irrigation, pectoral flap closure-repair, or epiplooplasty closure. The risk factors for those patients experiencing profound infections were diabetes, obesity, length of the surgical intervention, the time spent in the operating room, and the duration of endotracheal intubation. Eleven of the 111 patients died. The average length of hospitalization were similar for those patients treated by pectoral flap repair and by the epiplooplasty closure. All patients (100%) treated by the epiplooplasty closure developed an epigastric hernia. Six cases of recurrent infection were observed in the group treated by debridement. The average hospital stay was shortened for those patients benefiting from the pectoral flap and epiplooplasty closures. A high incidence of mortality is associated with profound sternal infection. The methods of treatment are various. We recommend as treatment of choice, the pectoral flap closure because there is relatively low risks with this procedure, little to no recurrence of infection, a shorter hospital stay and this procedure does not provoke epigastric hernia.
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PMID:[Post-sternotomy mediastinitis: strategy of treatment]. 178 19

Previous studies have provided conflicting evidence as to whether an increased risk of mediastinitis is associated with use of the internal mammary artery as a coronary bypass graft. In this study the effects of internal mammary artery grafts on wound complications were analyzed in a prospective, nonrandomized fashion. At New York University Medical Center from January 1985 through May 1988, 2356 patients underwent isolated coronary revascularization. Among these patients 1394 received one or more internal mammary artery grafts (group I) and 962 had vein grafts only (group II). Group I had a mean age of 59.5 years versus 67.7 years in group II; diabetes was equally present in both groups (22.7% versus 24.7%). Operative mortality rate was 1.3% in group I and 5.6% in group II. Sternal infection was significantly more prevalent in group I (2.2%, 31/1394) than in group II (0.8%, 8/962). Multivariate analysis revealed that aortic crossclamp time, use of a single internal mammary artery graft, use of a double mammary graft, and diabetes were associated with increased risk of sternal infection. The use of bilateral internal mammary artery grafting doubled the odds ratio of the risk compared with use of a single mammary graft, and the combination of diabetes and double internal mammary artery grafts increased the odds ratio 13.9-fold. Patients with an internal mammary artery graft who had sternal infection had a longer period of hospitalization than patients without a mammary artery graft who had sternal infection. We conclude that the risk of sternal infection is increased by the use of an internal mammary artery graft, especially use of double mammary grafts in the presence of diabetes.
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PMID:Sternal wound infections and use of internal mammary artery grafts. 832 Sep 97

From March 1988 to March 1990, 11 children with cystic fibrosis (age 5-15 years) underwent combined heart-lung transplantation at our institutes. Maintenance immunosuppression consisted of cyclosporin and azathioprine with corticosteroids and antithymocyte globulin used perioperatively and during rejection episodes. Six patients (55%) survive from 1.5-23 months all of whom have improved life quality. Actuarial survival to 1 year was 55%. At six months after transplant, mean forced expiratory volume at one second was 73.5% of predicted normal, compared with 25% before transplant. There was one perioperative death, three later deaths associated with obliterative bronchiolitis at two, eight, and nine months, and one from mediastinitis at four months. Of the 15 children accepted for transplantation but not receiving grafts, 10 have died (eight within four months of being placed onto the transplant list). Early postoperative problems included acute reversible rejection (n = 10), meconium ileus equivalent (n = 3), and pancreatitis (n = 1). There was a high incidence of later pulmonary rejection with a mean of 5.7 episodes per patient in the first six months. Pulmonary infection occurred relatively infrequently, with Pseudomonas aeruginosa being the most common pathogen. Persistent diabetes mellitus requiring insulin occurred in four and systemic hypertension developed in one.
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PMID:Heart-lung transplantation for cystic fibrosis. 2: Outcome. 192 6

Between 1980 and 1987, 31 cases of osteitis (n = 9) and/or mediastinitis (n = 22) were observed after 2,801 consecutive aorto-coronary bypasses (1.1%). Three types of treatment were used: 1) sternal debridement with osteosynthesis and continuous mediastinal irrigation (n = 25); 2) sternal and mediastinal debridement with open drainage without osteosynthesis (n = 2); 3) incision and debridement of sternal abscesses (n = 4). The overall mortality was 26% (8/31), i.e. 11% (1/9) for isolated osteitis and 32% (7/22) for mediastinitis. Four factors were statistically associated with infection: reoperation for hemorrhage (19.4%, p less than 0.001); preoperative diabetes (25%, p less than 0.001), postoperative low cardiac output (55%, p less than 0.001), postoperative respiratory insufficiency (45%, p less than 0.001).
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PMID:[Sternal osteitis and mediastinitis after coronary artery bypass graft surgery]. 201 32

Serum C-reactive protein (CRP) and alpha 1-acid glycoprotein (AAG) levels were studied in 188 patients undergoing heart operations with cardiopulmonary bypass. Mediastinitis or osteomyelitis of the sternum or both developed in 10 patients on postoperative day 4 to 13 (median, day 9). The mean CRP levels on day 2 were lower in patients with later deep sternal wound infection (9.1 +/- 1.5 mg/dl [mean +/- standard error]) compared with patients without major infections (14.0 +/- 0.8 mg/dl; p = 0.103 [univariate logistic regression]). AAG levels on day 2 reacted in a similar manner, yielding 78.2 +/- 5.5 mg/dl and 100.9 +/- 2.7 mg/dl, respectively (p = 0.0004). No correlation was found between CRP or AAG and duration of cardiopulmonary bypass, number of blood transfusions, or total protein levels on day 2. The white blood cell count (WBC) on day 2 was 13.1 +/- 1.7 X 10(3)/microliter for patients with infection and 9.7 +/- 0.3 for those without infection. Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that AAG, WBC, and CRP on day 2 were significant risk factors sufficiently predicting the probability of a deep sternal infection. After adjustment for these three variables, other variables (age, sex, total protein on day 2, diabetes mellitus, type of operation, duration of cardiopulmonary bypass, length of operation, repeat thoracotomy for bleeding, number of blood transfusions on the day of operation, intraaortic balloon pumping, reoperation, emergency operation, and surgeon's professional status) were not of additional significance. The goodness of fit of the statistical model was confirmed by a high correspondence between predicted and observed cases of deep sternal infection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Early prediction of deep sternal wound infection after heart operations by alpha-1 acid glycoprotein and C-reactive protein measurements. 349 Feb 32

Mediastinal infection occurred in 29 of 2031 patients (1.4%) who underwent median sternotomy for cardiac operation at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute between 1956 and 1981. Factors associated with the development of mediastinitis included postoperative complications such as low cardiac output, respiratory insufficiency, reoperation for bleeding, repeat median sternotomy, and triple valve replacement. Factors that were not significantly associated with the development of mediastinitis included preoperative functional class, preoperative cardiac index, age, sex, weight, or presence of diabetes mellitus. The mortality rate in patients who developed mediastinitis was 52%. Factors associated with death included preoperative functional class III or IV, type of operation, type of organism involved, and the development of pneumonia. The mortality rate was significantly lower (35% versus 73%) in the patients who underwent mediastinal exploration for treatment. There was no difference in survival whether the wound was closed over drainage tubes or packed open. Hospital stay, however, was significantly prolonged in the patients whose wounds were packed open.
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PMID:Mediastinal infection after open heart surgery. 387 Dec 59

A case report of a 60 year old female, who suffered from a perforation of the upper esophagus (broken dental prosthesis) and developed an acute candida albicans mediastinitis, is presented. There were no clinical indications for a mycosis (e.g. diabetes mellitus, esophagitis). The diagnostic criteria inclusively the role of computer-tomography as well as the surgical treatment (collar mediastinotomy) and antibiotic treatment are briefly discussed.
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PMID:[Mediastinitis with detection of Candida albicans]. 711 1


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