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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2000;17:255-258
© 2000 Elsevier Science NL
Cardiovascular Surgery Division, Maritime Heart Center, New Halifax Infirmary Hospital, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 3A7 Canada
Corresponding author. Tel.: +1-902-473-2116; fax: +1-902-473-4448
e-mail: ali.i{at}ns.sympatico.ca
| Abstract |
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Key Words: Minimum invasive coronary surgery Sternotomy Coronary bypass surgery
| 1. Introduction |
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In a trial to minimize these problems, and to provide a less invasive approach, a superior median sternotomy technique was developed and tried in consecutive 210 patients requiring coronary bypass grafting and/or valvular surgery.
The purpose of this study is to compare the outcome of the patients who had subtotal median sternotomy (SMS) and the standard sternotomy (SS).
| 2. Methods |
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Statistical analysis was performed by using the unpaired t-test and Fisher's exact test for the comparison between the two groups. P-values less than 0.05 were considered significant.
| 3. Results |
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3.2. Incisional discomfort
Grade I to Grade III was placed to asses the degree of the post-operative discomfort (Grade I being the least and Grade III being the greatest discomfort), It was found that in group I: 27 patients Grade I, 176 patients Grade II and seven patients Grade III. In group II: 21 patients Grade I, 183 Grade II and six patients Grade III, P=0.09.
3.3. Wound infection
In group I: two patients developed superficial wound infection and two patients had deep infection. In group II: four patients had superficial and two patients had deep infection, P=0.06.
3.4. Patient satisfaction and hospital stay
In group I: 99% satisfaction, mean hospital stay 5.4 days. Group II: 63% satisfaction, mean hospital stay 7.1 days, P<0.01 for patient's satisfaction and 0.03 for hospital stay (Table 2).
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| 4. Comment |
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The requirement of thoracoscopy, fluoroscopy, special designed instruments and femoral cannulations for cardiopulmonary bypass in the Port-Access method and the limited accessibility of the coronary arteries in the beating heart surgery, stimulated the search for other techniques that could allow the performance of all possible cardiac procedures through minimum incisions and the use of the standard instruments to avoid the cost increase. Based on this concept the mentioned limited median superior sternotomy was developed and consecutively tried in the described 210 patients. The exposure was adequate in all cases. Although no need to change to the SS technique was required in this group of patients, the SMS approach can be easily and quickly converted to a full sternotomy incision should the need for this arise. No increase in the wound infection was observed compared to the standard approach. In the SMS group, earlier patient ambulation was noticed in spite of the non-statistically significant difference in the degree of the postoperative pain. Despite the fact that the pump and the clamp time were not significantly different, the SMS required slightly longer time to perform. This increase time was due to mainly the opening of the chest and dissecting the internal mammary artery.
Theoretically the limited incision reduces the opening of the upper abdominal portion of the linea alba and also limits the excessive retraction on the sternal edges and the vertebrocostal joints. Hospital stay was shortened significantly in the SMS group.
The patients were very thrilled by the cosmetic look of the short incision (Fig. 2). Although hospital stay was shortened significantly in the SMS group, a bigger sample is needed to solidify this issue.
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| Footnotes |
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| Appendix A. Conference discussion |
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Dr Ali: We started the technique at the beginning of 1998, and we used it consecutively. This was compared to patients with the standard technique that was done 1 year earlier. As I said, because we're operating on the same group of patients, at the same center, and with the same referral pattern, the demographic data wasn't very different between the two.
Dr Hamilton: Obviously, you've got some convincing results and yet it would have been easier to convince us had you randomized prospectively. Presumably the information you collected on your standard group was retrospective and therefore the patient satisfaction information must have been difficult to obtain.
Dr Ali: Well, not really. The patients in both groups were followed and called by phone to answer a questionnaire about how they felt about the incision. Actually, it's very interesting, because some of these patients were very jealous when they compared their standard incision with the shorter ones. We think our data is valid, because we have a control (patients with the standard incision) and the data were collected based on a specific questionnaire.
Dr Hamilton: Are you going to do a prospective randomized trial to challenge us the next time?
Dr Ali: It could be done, however, I think it is not necessary because it will not add much.
Dr A. Sosnowski (Leicester, UK): Did you inform the patient that the operation would be done in a different way?
Dr Ali: No, we do not. In our group some surgeons used this technique (short incision) all the time in all patients. Others do the standard incision in all cases. In other words, it is not a prospective study.
Dr Sosnowski: I just wonder if patients were aware that they had been done slightly differently, because that can influence the patients later feelings. A patient knows that a smaller incision must be better; he can see it actually.
Dr Ali: You are right. However, because it is the surgeon's preference and since it is not the standard incision for all the surgeons in our group, there is no way to tell the patients pre-operatively. I hope this answers your question.
Dr J. Pirk (Prague, Czech Republic): As far as I understood, the only difference is the length of the skin incision, that's the only difference between these two groups?
Dr Ali: No. The skin incision is one of the differences. The other thing is cutting the sternum down to the junction between the xiphoid and the sternal body.
Dr Pirk: You didn't show any slide about what is your sternal incision. I didn't understand, is it median sternotomy or is it partial sternotomy?
Dr Ali: It is superior partial. It is the upper part of the sternum.
Dr Pirk: But you haven't shown a slide, so nobody knows what you have been doing with the sternum. You have shown only the slide of the skin incision.
Dr Hamilton: Did your sternotomy go right to the top?
Dr Ali: Yes, It started from the top. Can you put the slides back again? (Slide) This is the skin incision.
Dr Pirk: Go back. So this is the skin incision?
Dr Ali: Yes.
Dr Pirk: And where is your sternal incision?
Dr Ali: Starts from there (pointing to the supra-sternal notch).
Dr Pirk: But you haven't shown it and where it goes down.
Dr Ali: This is what I tried to show you (pointing from the supra-sternal notch to the sterno-xiphion junction).
Dr Hamilton: So what part of the sternum is still intact?
Dr Ali: The lower part of the sternum is still intact.
Dr Pirk: But how do you spread it? Do you make a J or L?
Dr Ali: No, there is no J. When you go down to the junction between the xiphoid and the sternal body, this is a flexible joint. So when you put the retractor it opens it up. You don't need to cut the sternum sideways. The xiphoid is cartilaginous and separates easily.
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