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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 53, 301-305, Copyright © 1992 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
W Ko, WD Lazenby, JA Zelano, OW Isom and KH Krieger
To investigate the effects of the hair removal methods and intraoperative
irrigation on suppurative mediastinitis after cardiopulmonary bypass
operations, 1,980 consecutive adult patients over a 2-year period in our
institution were prospectively randomized to manual shaving versus
electrical clipping of hair before the skin incision, and to
povidone-iodine solution (0.5%) versus saline solution mediastinal and
subcutaneous irrigation before wound closure. The overall incidence of
suppurative mediastinitis was 0.86% (17/1,980). The infectious rate was
significantly higher in the manually shaven (13/990) than in the
electrically clipped patients (4/990) with an odds ratio of 3.25 (95%
confidence interval, 1.11 to 9.32; p = 0.024). It was also higher in the
povidone-iodine group (11/990) than in the saline group (6/990), although
the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.16). Fourteen
patients were treated with operative debridement with closed tube
irrigation, with one failure requiring a conversion to an open wound. Two
patients were successfully treated with primary open wound procedures
followed by delayed muscular flap closures, and 1 patient succumbed to
rapid and profound sepsis soon after open drainage. We conclude that
electrical clipping is superior to manual shaving in the prevention of
suppurative mediastinitis. The routine use of povidone-iodine (0.5%)
irrigation was of no benefit in this study and may increase the incidence
of infection due to its known suppressive effects on local leukocytes and
fibroblasts. Furthermore, operative debridement with closed tube irrigation
was successful in treating the majority of cases in this series.
ARTICLES
Effects of shaving methods and intraoperative irrigation on suppurative mediastinitis after bypass operations
Department of Surgery, New York Hospital-Cornell University Medical College, New York 10021.
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