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Professor Malin Malmsjö, MD, PhD. Photo.

Malin Malmsjö

Professor

Professor Malin Malmsjö, MD, PhD. Photo.

Preventing heart injury during negative pressure wound therapy in cardiac surgery: assessment using real-time magnetic resonance imaging.

Author

  • Malin Malmsjö
  • Rainer Petzina
  • Martin Ugander
  • Henrik Engblom
  • Christian Torbrand
  • Arash Mokhtari
  • Roland Hetzer
  • Håkan Arheden
  • Richard Ingemansson

Summary, in English

OBJECTIVE: Heart rupture is a devastating complication to negative pressure wound therapy in cardiac surgery. Also, reduced cardiac output during negative pressure wound therapy has been reported. The present study aimed to examine the effects of negative pressure wound therapy on the position of the heart in relation to the thoracic wall using magnetic resonance imaging in a porcine sternotomy wound model. METHODS: Six pigs had median sternotomy followed by negative pressure wound therapy at -75, -125, and -175 mm Hg. Real-time magnetic resonance imaging movies (10 images/s) were acquired in a midventricular transverse plane or a midsagittal plane during the application of negative pressure wound therapy. RESULTS: Similar finding were observed at all different negative pressures studied. Negative pressure wound therapy caused the heart to be displaced toward the thoracic wall, and in some cases, the right ventricular free wall bulged into the space between the sternal edges, and the sharp edges of the sternum jutted into and deformed the anterior surface of the right ventricular free wall. These events were not affected by the interposition of 4 layers of paraffin gauze dressing but were hindered by the placement of a rigid barrier between the anterior portion of the heart and the inside of the thoracic wall. CONCLUSION: The results show altered position of the heart in relation to the sternum during negative pressure wound therapy. This may explain 2 potentially hazardous events associated with negative pressure wound therapy, namely, risk for heart rupture and reduced cardiac output. Inserting a rigid barrier over the heart may be a protective measure that is clinically practicable.

Department/s

  • Medicine, Lund
  • Ophthalmology, Lund
  • Clinical Physiology (Lund)
  • Thoracic Surgery
  • Lund Cardiac MR Group

Publishing year

2009

Language

English

Pages

712-717

Publication/Series

The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery

Volume

138

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Mosby-Elsevier

Topic

  • Surgery
  • Cardiac and Cardiovascular Systems

Status

Published

Research group

  • Lund Cardiac MR Group

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1097-685X