Sternal erythema: a distinctive postsurgical eruption.

J Am Acad Dermatol

Department of Pathology, James Haley Veterans Hospital, Tampa, Florida, USA.

Published: November 2005

Background/objective: Wound complications constitute a diverse array of surgical and dermatologic entities. We sought to describe the clinical and pathologic attributes of a series of patients in whom a distinctive thoracic surgical wound eruption developed after coronary bypass grafting.

Methods: We performed a detailed chart review, including history, surgical procedure notes, and biopsy findings, obtained from 3 patients; we examined the data and reconciled them with conventional etiologies in an attempt to discern a shared diagnosis and pathogenesis.

Results: The patients were white men (59, 68, and 73 years of age) in whom roughly symmetrical asymptomatic erythema developed within the borders of their sternal thoracotomy wounds between 1 and 2 years after open heart surgery. The cutaneous findings consisted of macular erythema and poikiloderma that blanched with external pressure. Biopsy findings yielded epithelial atrophy with capillary telangiectases.

Conclusion: Although cellulitis, dermal hypersensitivity to surgically implanted hardware including sternal wire, and an anatomic variant of costal fringe remain as possible diagnoses, an additional consideration includes a form of postsurgical reflex sympathetic dystrophy.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaad.2005.02.027DOI Listing

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