The potential complications of cardiac surgery with sternotomy include mediastinitis and major bleeding, events that are infrequent but carry high mortality. We report a unique complication of median sternotomy. A 71-year-old man underwent coronary artery bypass grafting complicated by sternal dehiscence on postoperative day 7. One week after discharge, he presented with purulent drainage from the sternal wound bed and was diagnosed as having mediastinitis. Irrigation, debridement, and sternal reconstruction were performed. Two days later, bleeding was observed in the wound, and during surgical exploration, a tear in the right ventricle was discovered, and the patient exsanguinated and died. Autopsy findings included focal adhesions connecting the posterior sternum to the right ventricle wall, as well as microscopic evidence of focally extensive fatty infiltration along the rupture margin of the myocardium. Pertinent aspects of the case are reviewed, with particular attention to the possible microbial etiology of mediastinal infection and most likely mechanisms of injury contributing to the fatal right ventricular rupture.
We examined all deaths in Connecticut involving tree mishaps (struck by a tree/tree limb, injuries associated with tree removal operations). Records of the Connecticut Office of the Chief Medical Examiner including autopsy, toxicology, and investigators' reports of deaths from 2004 to 2019 were reviewed. All underwent autopsy examination.There were 64 fatalities, with ages ranging from 4 to 90 years (mean, 50 years). The causes of death involved the following: 56 blunt injury (primary site: 25 head, 13 multiple locations, 11 torso, and 7 neck), 5 traumatic asphyxia, 2 electrocution, and 1 chainsaw injury. Deaths were classified into 3 groups: 21 nonprofessional woodcutters, 19 professional woodcutters, and 24 tree failures. Among all woodcutters (100% men), impact by a falling tree/limb (78%) was the most common fatal event, and the most common lethal injury site was the head (45%). For tree failures, 58% involved storm/high-wind events, whereas 42% were spontaneous. Of the tree failure events, 58% involved motor vehicles, with most (86%) occurring while driving. Ethanol was detected in 6 decedents with blood concentrations ranging from 0.02 to 0.19 gm%, of which 4 were nonprofessional and 2 were professional woodcutters. There were some seasonal differences among the 3 groups.Overall, fatalities of nonprofessional woodcutters, compared with professionals, were more likely to involve an older man (58 vs 40 years), working alone (67% vs 11%), and under the influence of ethanol (19% vs 11%) in late summer-autumn who dies of blunt head trauma from a falling tree or tree limb. Aggressive tree control management along highways has been used to attempt to decrease storm-related fatalities.
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