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Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2003;23:650
© 2003 Elsevier Science NL


Letter to the Editor

Reply to Tang

M. Doss*

Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, J.W. Goethe University Frankfurt, Theodor Stern Kai 7, 60599 Frankfurt am Main, Germany

Received 22 December 2002; accepted 24 December 2002.

* Tel.: +49-69-6301-6141; fax: +49-69-6301-5849
e-mail: mirkodoss{at}aol.com

Key Words: Topical negative pressure • Sternal dehiscence • Wound debridement

We appreciate Dr Tang's interest in our study and are grateful for the opportunity to answer her questions. The basis for treatment selection in our study was not elusive, but based on the decision of a surgeon to try a new management strategy. Innovation can only happen if individuals have the courage to commit themselves to a new way. We were intrigued by the assumption that our diagnosis of sternal osteomyelitis rested largely on a clinical impression and not on microbiological criteria. In the methods section we explicitely described the microbiological culture findings for all patients in both groups [1]. As the extent of infection and type of organisms were comparable in both groups, the presented data can not invalidate the comparison between these modalities. We agree that adequate wound debridement is an important corner stone for eventual successful outcome, and practice radical wound debridement of all avital and infected tissues. Repetitive wound debridement was not necessary in all but one of our patients (in the conventional group). Also, at 5 weeks follow up, after discharge from rehabilitation, none of the patients had developed late fistulas or sinus formation involving sequestrated pockets of infected or necrotic tissues. Dr Tang points out two ways in which vacuum assisted therapy contributes towards a successful outcome of a sternotomy wound infection. However, she does not mention the foremost advantage over conventional therapy, which is the accelerated formation of granulation tissue. We demonstrated that even large defects can be covered within a short period of time and additional mutilating surgery can be avoided. That is the essence of our single centre experience.

References

  1. Doss M., Martens S., Wood J.P., Wolff J.D., Baier C., Moritz A. Vacuum-assisted suction drainage versus conventional treatment in the management of poststernotomy osteomyelitis. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2002;22:934-938.[Abstract/Free Full Text]




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Right arrow Cardiac - other


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