“…The incidence of foreign body‐induced wound infection (Losanoff and others 2002) and aseptic instability (Luciani and others 2006) has prompted surgeons to use absorbable sutures in median sternotomies where the need for rigid and stable closure is well known, advocating that stability might not be the only decision maker in closure method selection. The use of polydioxanone in the primary closure of sternotomy has been largely reported in human beings (van Sterkenburg and others 1990, Kreitmann and others 1992, Schwab and others 1994, Keceligil and others 2000, Losanoff and others 2002, Luciani and others 2006). Initially, the use of polydioxanone was recommended for sternotomy closure in paediatric open cardiac surgery (Keceligil and others 2000) to prevent sutures from remaining permanently in immature patients.…”