Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution

Objective: Descending necrotizing mediastinitis is caused by the spread of the infection to the mediastinum from the deep and superficial cervical fascial planes. Surgical drainage of severe descending necrotizing mediastinitis was done through an invasive transthoracic and transcervical approach. I...

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Main Authors: Toong, Liew Yew, Ghauth, Sakina, Ong, Yazid Pol, Zulkiflee, Abu Bakar
Format: Article
Published: Aves 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/43103/
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spelling my.um.eprints.431032023-08-24T08:38:53Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/43103/ Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution Toong, Liew Yew Ghauth, Sakina Ong, Yazid Pol Zulkiflee, Abu Bakar RF Otorhinolaryngology Objective: Descending necrotizing mediastinitis is caused by the spread of the infection to the mediastinum from the deep and superficial cervical fascial planes. Surgical drainage of severe descending necrotizing mediastinitis was done through an invasive transthoracic and transcervical approach. In this study, we described a series of severe descending necrotizing mediastinitis treated with the only transcervical approach with or without vacuum-assisted dressing. Methods: A retrospective, single-institution study was performed to evaluate the outcome of patients with descending necrotizing mediastinitis managed from June 2015 until March 2020. Results: A total of 5 patients were identified. All subjects underwent transcervical drainage of descending necrotizing mediastinitis. Vacuumassisted dressing was applied to 3 patients. One subject belonged to type I, and there were 2 each for type Ila and I lb according to Endo et al's3 computed tomography classification. All patients survived with only transcervical drainage, without the invasive transthoracic approach. The mean duration from the time of admission to surgical drainage was 10.3 hours. The mean length of the vacuum-assisted dressing application was 11 days. All patients were discharged from the hospital, with complete resolution of disease. Conclusion: Less invasive transcervical drainage may be adequate in treating severe descending necrotizing mediastinitis, as long as early treatment is recognized and initiated. Incorporating vacuum-assisted dressing in the treatment course may open the door for a new algorithm. Aves 2022-01 Article PeerReviewed Toong, Liew Yew and Ghauth, Sakina and Ong, Yazid Pol and Zulkiflee, Abu Bakar (2022) Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution. B-ENT, 18 (1). pp. 21-27. DOI https://doi.org/10.5152/B-ENT.2022.21570 <https://doi.org/10.5152/B-ENT.2022.21570>. 10.5152/B-ENT.2022.21570
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic RF Otorhinolaryngology
spellingShingle RF Otorhinolaryngology
Toong, Liew Yew
Ghauth, Sakina
Ong, Yazid Pol
Zulkiflee, Abu Bakar
Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution
description Objective: Descending necrotizing mediastinitis is caused by the spread of the infection to the mediastinum from the deep and superficial cervical fascial planes. Surgical drainage of severe descending necrotizing mediastinitis was done through an invasive transthoracic and transcervical approach. In this study, we described a series of severe descending necrotizing mediastinitis treated with the only transcervical approach with or without vacuum-assisted dressing. Methods: A retrospective, single-institution study was performed to evaluate the outcome of patients with descending necrotizing mediastinitis managed from June 2015 until March 2020. Results: A total of 5 patients were identified. All subjects underwent transcervical drainage of descending necrotizing mediastinitis. Vacuumassisted dressing was applied to 3 patients. One subject belonged to type I, and there were 2 each for type Ila and I lb according to Endo et al's3 computed tomography classification. All patients survived with only transcervical drainage, without the invasive transthoracic approach. The mean duration from the time of admission to surgical drainage was 10.3 hours. The mean length of the vacuum-assisted dressing application was 11 days. All patients were discharged from the hospital, with complete resolution of disease. Conclusion: Less invasive transcervical drainage may be adequate in treating severe descending necrotizing mediastinitis, as long as early treatment is recognized and initiated. Incorporating vacuum-assisted dressing in the treatment course may open the door for a new algorithm.
format Article
author Toong, Liew Yew
Ghauth, Sakina
Ong, Yazid Pol
Zulkiflee, Abu Bakar
author_facet Toong, Liew Yew
Ghauth, Sakina
Ong, Yazid Pol
Zulkiflee, Abu Bakar
author_sort Toong, Liew Yew
title Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution
title_short Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution
title_full Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution
title_fullStr Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution
title_full_unstemmed Drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution
title_sort drainage of severe descending mediastinitis: 5-year experience in a single tertiary institution
publisher Aves
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/43103/
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score 13.211869