Sternal wound complications after primary isolated myocardial revascularization: the importance of the post-operative variables.
Publication year
2001Source
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, 19, 4, (2001), pp. 471--6ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Cardio Thoracic Surgery
Health Evidence
Gynaecology
Journal title
European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery
Volume
vol. 19
Issue
iss. 4
Page start
p. 471-
Page end
p. 6
Subject
Epidemiology; EpidemiologieAbstract
OBJECTIVE: Select pre-, peri-, and post-operative variables, predictive for sternal wound complications (SWC), in a clinical setting. METHODS: We analyzed pre-, peri-, and post-operative data of 3815 patients who underwent a primary isolated bypass grafting. 100 patients (2.6%) had post-operative SWC. Unifactor and multifactor risk analysis, were used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: Unifactor analysis identified age (P=0.05), obesity (P=0.001), lung disease (P=0.001), extracorporeal circulation >100 min (P=0.02), graft choice (P=0.01), post-operative low cardiac output, reoperation, nephrological, pulmonary problems (P<0.001) as risk factors. Multifactor analysis, identified obesity (P=0.005), reoperation (P=0.01), nephrological (P=0.0001), pulmonary problems (P=0.001) and No-IMA-use (P=0.05) as independent predictors. Age <50 years (P=0.04) decreased the risk for SWC. There is, however, an interaction of the graft-use and the pre-operative and post-operative predictors, that can mask the precise effect of the graft-use. CONCLUSION: Reoperation, nephrological and pulmonary problems are strong predictors, obesity and age independent preoperative risk factors for sternal wound complications.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [246205]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [93266]
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