The altered arterial supply to the sternum after use of the internal thoracic artery in coronary bypass surgery was studied by delineation of the sternal arterial system with plastic material and by injection of ink/barium contrast for radiography and microscopy. The study was performed on 17 anterior chest walls from human cadavers. The total arterial supply was charted before and after 'harvest' of the internal thoracic artery. The dominant blood supply to the sternum was found to be periosteal and derived almost exclusively from branches of the internal thoracic artery. Following harvest of that artery, the arterial supply to the upper part of the corpus sterni was compromised, and based only on sparse ramifications to the periosteal membrane from the thoracoacromial artery via branches from the pectoralis major muscle.
The leucocyte count was 12-9 x 109/1 with 71% neutrophils. After blood had been taken for culture he was put on intravenous penicillin (2 million units four times a day) and netilmicin (150mg three times a day) without effect. Because a weak positive Legionella titre was detected the antibiotic treatment was changed to intravenous erythromycin (1 g four times a day). Four days later oral rifampicin (300 mg three times a day) was added because a low grade fever persisted. The patient improved and his temperature became normal. Nineteen days after admission the chest x ray was normal and echocardiography showed only a minor pericardial effusion.Blood cultures showed no bacterial growth. Legionella longbeachae titres were 32 on day 2, 2,000 on day 14, 512 on day 45, and 256 on day 73.
It has previously been reported that the Ley prosthesis, a 0.5-mm-thick titanium alloy plate designed for reconstruction and stabilization of the unstable sternotomy, leads to shorter hospital stay and reduces the need for further surgical procedures in patients with postoperative mediastinitis after open heart surgery. We report our initial experience with the Ley prosthesis in patients with chronic aseptic sternotomy dehiscence. The study included 6 male patients (age 42-80 years) with opiate-derivate-dependent intractable pain and significantly reduced quality of life caused by noninfected sternal pseudoarthrosis and unstable sternotomy with large sternal bone tissue deficit. Four of the patients had undergone various surgical fixation procedures 8 days to 12 months after the primary operation. The patients were treated with reconstruction and stabilization of the sternum with the Ley prosthesis 10 to 40 months after the primary operation. In 1 patient bone transplantation was used. No immediate peri- or postoperative complications were observed, and all patients were discharged 4 to 11 days after surgery. One patient who received a bone transplant developed wound infection, and the prosthesis was removed 5 weeks after implantation. At 6-month follow-up all sternotomies were found stable, and patients reported that pain had decreased and quality of life was significantly improved. Our results demonstrate that the Ley prosthesis can be safely and efficiently used for the reconstruction and stabilization of the sternum in patients with intractable pain caused by noninfected postoperative sternal dehiscence and large sternal bone tissue deficit.
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