Delayed Sternal Closure for High-Risk Cardiac Surgery Patients: Life-Saving Strategy for Improved Outcomes
Sahin Iscan, Ertürk Karaağaç, Nuri Utkan Tunca, Hacı Anıl Solak, Hasan İner, Serkan Yazman, Yuksel Besir, Orhan Gökalp, Levent Yılık, Ali Gürbüz

TL;DR
Delayed sternal closure in high-risk cardiac surgery patients reduces complications and mortality by allowing better postoperative management.
Contribution
Demonstrates that planned delayed sternal closure improves outcomes in high-risk cardiac surgery patients.
Findings
DSC was used in 1.8% of cardiac surgeries, mainly due to bleeding or hemodynamic instability.
DSC patients had higher mortality (16.1%) but no increased sternal infection rates.
Planned DSC reduced perioperative complications in high-risk patients.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Delayed sternal closure (DSC) is a useful management strategy for complex cardiac interventions. The aim of this study was to investigate the patients who had DSC in our clinic over a 12-year period and to evaluate the postoperative results. Methods: A total of 124 DSC patients from a total cardiac surgery practice during a 12-year period (n = 6532, 1.8%, between January 2014 and September 2025) were retrospectively analyzed. Preoperative and intraoperative patient characteristics, morbidities, and mortality rates were collected and compared with the group undergoing primary sternal closure (PSC), which were matched with the DSC group in terms of preoperative and intraoperative patient characteristics. Results: A total of 124 (1.8%) patients required DSC, and 33.1% of the patients were females. The indications were bleeding (n = 81, 65%) and hemodynamic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurgical site infection prevention · Cardiac and Coronary Surgery Techniques · Infectious Aortic and Vascular Conditions
