Journal Home
Search for

Volume 125, Issue 4, Pages 945-949 (April 2003)


View previous. 26 of 46 View next.

Surgical management of sternoclavicular joint infections☆☆

Harold M. Burkhart, MD, Claude Deschamps, MD, Mark S. Allen, MD, Francis C. Nichols III, MD, Daniel L. Miller, MD, Peter C. Pairolero, MD

Received 30 May 2002; received in revised form 11 July 2002 and 8 September 2002; accepted 17 September 2002.

Abstract 

Objective: Sternoclavicular joint infections are rare, and their management is controversial. We reviewed our experience with the surgical management of this condition. Methods: From August 1988 to August 2001, 26 patients (16 men and 10 women) were treated surgically for infected sternoclavicular joints. The median age was 56 years (range, 20-77 years). Patients who had a recent previous median sternotomy were excluded. Results: All patients were symptomatic. Pain was present in 21 patients, swelling in 14 patients, fever in 11 patients, and erythema in 9 patients. Associated conditions included recent or ongoing infections in other areas in 12 patients (pneumonia in 4 patients, multiple joint infections in 2 patients, and other in 6 patients) and an indwelling central venous catheter in 1 patient. Five patients had a history of trauma in the region of the joint. Four patients had prior joint incision and drainage. Unilateral sternoclavicular joint resection was done in 18 patients, bilateral resection in 2 patients, and incision and drainage with debridement in 6 patients. Wound culture results were positive in 24 patients, and the most common organism isolated was Staphylococcus aureus (n = 17). Eleven patients had transposition of the ipsilateral pectoralis major muscle to obliterate residual space and to reconstruct the chest wall. Two (7.7%) patients had complications, and 1 died (operative mortality, 3.8%). Follow-up was complete in all 25 operative survivors and ranged from 2 months to 10 years (median, 25 months). Twenty-one patients are alive without symptoms, infection, or limitations in range of motion. Four patients have died as a result of causes unrelated to their joint infections. Conclusions: Symptomatic sternoclavicular joint infections often require surgical intervention. Surgical resection combined with muscle transposition provides effective long-term outcome.

J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2003;125:945-9

Division of General Thoracic Surgery, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, Minn.

 Read at the Eighty-first Annual Meeting of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery, San Diego, Calif, May 6-9, 2001.

☆☆ Address for reprints: Claude Deschamps, MD, Division of General Thoracic Surgery, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, 200 First St SW, Rochester, MN 55905 (E-mail: deschamps.claude@mayo.edu).

 0022-5223/2003 $30.00+0

PII: S0022-5223(02)73228-5

doi:10.1067/mtc.2003.172


View previous. 26 of 46 View next.