Mediastinitis

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Background

  • Infection of the structures in the mediastinum
    • The mediastinum refers to the space between the lungs which contains the heart, thymus, esophagus, and trachea
  • Confusing nomenclature, and includes mediastinal infections caused by extension of a cervical infection (necrotizing mediastinitis or descending mediastinitis) and mediastinal infection after sternotomy (sternal infection or deep sternal wound infection)

Microbiology

Epidemiology

  • Post-surgical deep sternal wound infections occur after about 1% of cardiac surgeries
    • Incidence increases with the complexity of the operation, and is highest with CABG = valve replacement or aortic surgery
    • Risk increases with BMI, diabetes, and number of platelet transfusions

Clinical Manifestations

  • Usually presents within 30 days of surgery
  • Fever, chest pain, drainage from surgical site
  • See CDC definition, above

Prognosis

  • For deep sternal wound infections after cardiac surgery
    • Mortality is about 15% in the short term, but is also higher than those without infection in the years following surgery
    • Mortality is higher when Gram-negatives are isolated

Investigations

  • CT chest can show evidence, including sternal wire displacement, sternal disruption, free gas, or fluid collections
  • Surgical exploration, with fluid sent for culture

Diagnosis

CDC Definition

  • One of the following:
    • Organisms cultured from mediastinal tissue or fluid
    • Gross anatomical or histopathologic evidence of mediastinitis
    • Fever, chest pain, or sternal instability
  • Plus one of the following:
    • Purulence from the mediastinal area
    • Mediastinal widening on imaging

Management

  • In general, surgical exploration with debridement should always be performed as quickly as possible
  • Empiric antibiotics should be broad, including coverage for MRSA and resistant Gram-negatives
    • Antimicrobials directed by culture results
  • Duration of therapy unclear but depends on adequacy of source control, presence of sternal osteitis, and presence of metal or other foreign bodies
    • Probably somewhere between 3 and 12 weeks
    • Following sternal resection and pectoral flap: maybe 2 to 3 weeks
    • After debridement without resection, or with residual bone infection: probably 4 to 6 weeks