| Literature DB >> 28409440 |
Ferdinando Agresta1, Alice Marzetti2, Silvia Vigna2, Daniela Prando2, Raffaele Porfidia2, Salomone Di Saverio3.
Abstract
Outcome of primary and incisional hernia repair is still affected by clinical complications in terms of recurrences, pain and discomfort. Factors like surgical approach, prosthesis characteristics and method of fixation might influence the outcome. We evaluated in a prospective observational study a cohort population which underwent primary and incisional laparoscopic hernia repair, with the use of a composite mesh in polypropylene fixed with absorbable devices. We focused on assessing the feasibility and safety of these procedures; they were always performed by an experienced laparoscopic surgeon, analyzing data from our patients through the EuraHS registry. Seventy nine procedures of primary and incisional hernia repair were performed from July 2013 to November 2015 at Santa Maria Regina degli Angeli Hospital in Adria (RO). All cases have been registered at the EuraHS registry ( http://www.eurahs.eu ); among them, we analyzed 29 procedures performed using a new composite polypropylene mesh (CMC, Clear Composite Mesh, DIPROMED srl San Mauro Torinese, Turin, Italy), fixed with absorbable tackers (ETHICON, Ethicon LLC Guaynabo, Puerto Rico 00969). We performed 23 incisional hernia repairs, 4 primary hernia repairs (1 umbilical, 2 epigastric and 1 lumbar hernia) and 2 parastomal hernia repairs. The median operation time was 65.1 min for elective and 81.4 min for urgent procedures (three cases). We had two post-operative complications (6.89%), one case of bleeding and another case of prolonged ileus successfully treated with conservative management. We had no recurrences at follow-up. According to QoL, at 12 months patients do not complain about any pain or discomfort for esthetic result. Laparoscopic treatment of primary and incisional hernia with the use of composite mesh in polypropylene fixed with absorbable devices is feasible and safe.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal hernias; Absorbable tackers; Laparoscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28409440 PMCID: PMC5686236 DOI: 10.1007/s13304-017-0444-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Updates Surg ISSN: 2038-131X
Type, localization and size of hernia according to the European Hernia Society
| Incisional hernia | Primary hernia | Parastomal hernia | |
|---|---|---|---|
| LOCALIZATION | n.2 L1 | n.3 M | 2 PHIII- |
| WIDTH/LENGTH OF HERNIA (cm)(range) | 10.6 (4–20)/18.7 (4–30) | 9.2 (8–10)/12.3 (10–14) | 5/10 |
| MEDIAN SIZE (cm2) | 104 | 108 | 50 |
M midline (1: subxyphoidal, 2: epigastric, 3: umbilical, 4: infraumbilical, 5: suprapubic), L lateral/lumbar (1: subcostal, 2: flank, 3: iliac), PH primary parastomal hernia size ≥5 cm
Main patients’ characteristics and main results
| Patients | 29 |
| Male/female | 14/15 |
| Median hospital stay elective/emergency (range) | 3.07 (3–5.5)/6.88 (6–9.5) days |
| BMI | 28.5 (range 24.3–32.4) |
| Comorbidities | 6 patients (20.6%) |
| Emergency | 3 (10.34%) |
| Median operative time elective/emergency (range) | 65.3 (45.2–72.5)/81.2 (59.5–90.3) minutes |
| Concomitant surgery | 6 procedures (20.68%) |
| Post-op complications | 2 (6.89%) |
| Recurrences (at 12-month follow-up) | 0 |