Cutaneous Closure After Cardiac Operations
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 226 (5), 606-612
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-199711000-00005
Abstract
To determine the difference in wound complication and infection rates between suture and staple closure techniques applied to clean incisions in coronary bypass patients. The true incidence of postoperative wound complications, and their correlation with closure techniques, has been obscured by study designs incorporating small numbers, retrospective short follow-up, uncontrolled host factors, and narrowly defined complications. Sternal and leg wounds were studied prospectively, each patient serving as his or her own control. Two hundred forty-two patients with sternal and saphenous vein harvest wounds had half of each wound closed with staples and the other half with intradermal sutures (484 sternal and 516 leg segments). Wound complications were defined as drainage, erythema, separation, necrosis, seroma, or infection. Infections were identified in the subset having purulent drainage, antibiotic therapy, or debridement. Wounds were examined at discharge, at 1 week after discharge, and at 3 to 4 weeks after operation. Patient preferences for closure type were assessed 3 to 4 weeks after operation. Neither leg nor sternal wounds had a statistically significant difference in infection rate according to closure method (leg sutured = 9.3% vs. leg stapled = 8.9%; p = 0.99, and sternal sutured = 0.4% vs. sternal stapled = 2.5%; p = 0.128). There was, however, a greater complication rate in stapled segments (leg stapled = 46.9% vs. leg sutured = 32.6%; p = 0.001, and sternal stapled = 14.9% vs. sternal sutured = 3.7%; p = 0.00005). Sutures were favored over staples among patients who expressed a preference (sternal = 75.6%, leg = 74.6%). With the host factors controlled by pairing staples and sutures in each patient, we demonstrated a similar incidence of infection but a significantly lower incidence of total wound complications with intradermal suture closure than with staple closure.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prospective study of wound complications in continuous infrainguinal incisions after lower limb arterial reconstruction: Incidence, risk factors, and costSurgery, 1996
- Cost analysis of stapling versus suturing for skin closureThe American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 1995
- Closure of laparotomy wounds: skin staples versus suturesBritish Journal of Surgery, 1992
- Surveillance of Surgical Wound Infections Following Open Heart SurgeryInfection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, 1991
- Preoperative correlates of impaired wound healing after saphenous vein excisionThe Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 1989
- Risk Factors for Surgical-Wound Infection Following Cardiac SurgeryThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1987
- Study of cardiothoracic wound infection at St. Thomas' HospitalBritish Journal of Surgery, 1985
- Comparative study of leg wound skin closure in coronary artery bypass graft operations.Thorax, 1984
- WOUND INFECTION IN CARDIOTHORACIC SURGERYThe Lancet, 1983
- Leg wound complications associated with coronary revascularizationThe Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 1981