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Use of incisional negative pressure wound therapy on closed median sternal incisions after cardiothoracic surgery: clinical evidence and consensus recommendations.

Dohmen, Pascal M ; Markou, Thanasie ; Ingemansson, Richard LU ; Rotering, Heinrich ; Hartman, Jean M ; van Valen, Richard ; Brunott, Maaike and Segers, Patrique (2014) In Medical Science Monitor 20. p.1814-1825
Abstract
Abstract Negative pressure wound therapy is a concept introduced initially to assist in the treatment of chronic open wounds. Recently, there has been growing interest in using the technique on closed incisions after surgery to prevent potentially severe surgical site infections and other wound complications in high-risk patients. Negative pressure wound therapy uses a negative pressure unit and specific dressings that help to hold the incision edges together, redistribute lateral tension, reduce edema, stimulate perfusion, and protect the surgical site from external infectious sources. Randomized, controlled studies of negative pressure wound therapy for closed incisions in orthopedic settings (which also is a clean surgical procedure in... (More)
Abstract Negative pressure wound therapy is a concept introduced initially to assist in the treatment of chronic open wounds. Recently, there has been growing interest in using the technique on closed incisions after surgery to prevent potentially severe surgical site infections and other wound complications in high-risk patients. Negative pressure wound therapy uses a negative pressure unit and specific dressings that help to hold the incision edges together, redistribute lateral tension, reduce edema, stimulate perfusion, and protect the surgical site from external infectious sources. Randomized, controlled studies of negative pressure wound therapy for closed incisions in orthopedic settings (which also is a clean surgical procedure in absence of an open fracture) have shown the technology can reduce the risk of wound infection, wound dehiscence, and seroma, and there is accumulating evidence that it also improves wound outcomes after cardiothoracic surgery. Identifying at-risk individuals for whom prophylactic use of negative pressure wound therapy would be most cost-effective remains a challenge; however, several risk-stratification systems have been proposed and should be evaluated more fully. The recent availability of a single-use, closed incision management system offers surgeons a convenient and practical means of delivering negative pressure wound therapy to their high-risk patients, with excellent wound outcomes reported to date. Although larger, randomized, controlled studies will help to clarify the precise role and benefits of such a system in cardiothoracic surgery, limited initial evidence from clinical studies and from the authors' own experiences appears promising. In light of the growing interest in this technology among cardiothoracic surgeons, a consensus meeting, which was attended by a group of international experts, was held to review existing evidence for negative pressure wound therapy in the prevention of wound complications after surgery and to provide recommendations on the optimal use of negative pressure wound therapy on closed median sternal incisions after cardiothoracic surgery. (Less)
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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Medical Science Monitor
volume
20
pages
1814 - 1825
publisher
International Scientific Information (ISI)
external identifiers
  • pmid:25280449
  • wos:000342673400001
  • scopus:84908136846
  • pmid:25280449
ISSN
1643-3750
DOI
10.12659/MSM.891169
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3ab30388-aa12-4aef-a4ae-ff3577415890 (old id 4738257)
alternative location
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25280449?dopt=Abstract
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 11:16:34
date last changed
2023-02-20 17:54:09
@article{3ab30388-aa12-4aef-a4ae-ff3577415890,
  abstract     = {{Abstract Negative pressure wound therapy is a concept introduced initially to assist in the treatment of chronic open wounds. Recently, there has been growing interest in using the technique on closed incisions after surgery to prevent potentially severe surgical site infections and other wound complications in high-risk patients. Negative pressure wound therapy uses a negative pressure unit and specific dressings that help to hold the incision edges together, redistribute lateral tension, reduce edema, stimulate perfusion, and protect the surgical site from external infectious sources. Randomized, controlled studies of negative pressure wound therapy for closed incisions in orthopedic settings (which also is a clean surgical procedure in absence of an open fracture) have shown the technology can reduce the risk of wound infection, wound dehiscence, and seroma, and there is accumulating evidence that it also improves wound outcomes after cardiothoracic surgery. Identifying at-risk individuals for whom prophylactic use of negative pressure wound therapy would be most cost-effective remains a challenge; however, several risk-stratification systems have been proposed and should be evaluated more fully. The recent availability of a single-use, closed incision management system offers surgeons a convenient and practical means of delivering negative pressure wound therapy to their high-risk patients, with excellent wound outcomes reported to date. Although larger, randomized, controlled studies will help to clarify the precise role and benefits of such a system in cardiothoracic surgery, limited initial evidence from clinical studies and from the authors' own experiences appears promising. In light of the growing interest in this technology among cardiothoracic surgeons, a consensus meeting, which was attended by a group of international experts, was held to review existing evidence for negative pressure wound therapy in the prevention of wound complications after surgery and to provide recommendations on the optimal use of negative pressure wound therapy on closed median sternal incisions after cardiothoracic surgery.}},
  author       = {{Dohmen, Pascal M and Markou, Thanasie and Ingemansson, Richard and Rotering, Heinrich and Hartman, Jean M and van Valen, Richard and Brunott, Maaike and Segers, Patrique}},
  issn         = {{1643-3750}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{1814--1825}},
  publisher    = {{International Scientific Information (ISI)}},
  series       = {{Medical Science Monitor}},
  title        = {{Use of incisional negative pressure wound therapy on closed median sternal incisions after cardiothoracic surgery: clinical evidence and consensus recommendations.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.891169}},
  doi          = {{10.12659/MSM.891169}},
  volume       = {{20}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}