Mediastinitis is an infectious complication that can occur after cardiac surgery. The incidence varies between 1 and 3% depending on the type of procedure and the patient's condition. The mortality of this severe postoperative complication rises from 10 to 35%, which makes it dreadful. The major risk factors reported are obesity, diabetes, and immunosuppressive therapy. There are other less important ones: age, coronary bypass grafting (especially if using the two internal mammary arteries), nosocomial pneumonia, dialysis, prolonged mechanical ventilation, long operative asepsis, undrained retro-sternally hematoma, prolonged pre-operative hospitalization...). Prevention is very important. The principle of asepsis must absolutely be respected. The use of prophylactic antibiotic therapy is recommended. The most commonly encountered organisms are Staphylococcus aureus, coagulase-negative Staphylococci and gram-negative bacilli. There are several treatment modalities that vary between centers and may be different depending on the surgical team's experience and the depth or extent of the infection. The common principles of these treatments are: antibiotic therapy and surgical debridement (the timing of which may vary). The timing and modalities of wound closure are subject to variations: immediate sternal closure with placement of multiple or delayed drains. Muscle flaps or large omentum transplant may be necessary if tissue loss is too important. The investigators propose to review their experience in the treatment of cardiac post-surgery mediastinitis at Brugmann University Hospital in the last 20 years in both adult and pediatric patients.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
19
Data extraction from medical files
CHU Brugmann
Brussels, Belgium
Duration of the hospitalization
Duration of the hospitalization
Time frame: 20 years
Mortality at six months
Mortality rate six months after mediastinitis diagnosis
Time frame: 6 months
Percentage of recurrence
Percentage of recurrence of mediastinitis
Time frame: 20 years
Percentage of re-hospitalization
Percentage of re-hospitalizations caused by mediastinitis
Time frame: 20 years
Duration of the antibiotic treatment
Duration of the antibiotic treatment for mediastinitis
Time frame: 20 years
Presence of superinfection
Presence of superinfection
Time frame: 20 years
Date of birth
Demographic data : Date of birth.
Time frame: 20 years
Sex
Demographic data : sex.
Time frame: 20 years
Risk factors
Demographic data : presence of risk factors (obesity, diabetes...).
Time frame: 20 years
Surgical intervention
Name of the surgical intervention that caused the mediastinitis
Time frame: 20 years
Germ identification
Name of the germ causing the mediastinitis
Time frame: 20 years
Type of treatment
Name of the antibiotics used to treat the mediastinitis
Time frame: 20 years
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.