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Primary and Recurrent Repair of Incisional Hernia Based on Biomechanical Considerations to Avoid Mesh-Related Complications

Aim: Mechanical principles successfully guide the construction of polymer material composites in engineering. Since the abdominal wall is a polymer composite augmented with a textile during incisional hernia repair we ask: can incisional hernia be repaired safely and durably based on biomechanical p...

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Autores principales: Nessel, Regine, Löffler, Thorsten, Rinn, Johannes, Lösel, Philipp, Voss, Samuel, Heuveline, Vincent, Vollmer, Matthias, Görich, Johannes, Ludwig, Yannique-Maximilian, Al-Hileh, Luai, Kallinowski, Friedrich
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8714753/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34977141
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2021.764470
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author Nessel, Regine
Löffler, Thorsten
Rinn, Johannes
Lösel, Philipp
Voss, Samuel
Heuveline, Vincent
Vollmer, Matthias
Görich, Johannes
Ludwig, Yannique-Maximilian
Al-Hileh, Luai
Kallinowski, Friedrich
author_facet Nessel, Regine
Löffler, Thorsten
Rinn, Johannes
Lösel, Philipp
Voss, Samuel
Heuveline, Vincent
Vollmer, Matthias
Görich, Johannes
Ludwig, Yannique-Maximilian
Al-Hileh, Luai
Kallinowski, Friedrich
author_sort Nessel, Regine
collection PubMed
description Aim: Mechanical principles successfully guide the construction of polymer material composites in engineering. Since the abdominal wall is a polymer composite augmented with a textile during incisional hernia repair we ask: can incisional hernia be repaired safely and durably based on biomechanical principles? Material and Methods: Repair materials were assessed on a self-built bench test using pulse loads to elude influences on the reconstruction of the abdominal wall. Tissue elasticity was analyzed preoperatively as needed with computed tomography at rest and during Valsalva's maneuver. Preoperatively, the critical retention force of the reconstruction to pulse loads was calculated and a biomechanically durable repair was designed based on the needs of the individual patient. Intraoperatively, the design was adjusted as needed. Hernia meshes with high grip factors (Progrip(®), Dahlhausen(®) Cicat) were used for the repairs. Mesh sizes, fixation elements and reconstructive details were oriented on the biomechanical design. All patients recieved single-shot antibiosis. Patients were discharged after full ambulation was achieved. Results: A total of 163 patients (82 males and 81 females) were treated for incisional hernia in four hospitals by ten surgeons. Primary hernia was repaired in 119 patients. Recurrent hernia was operated on in 44 cases. Recurrent hernia was significantly larger (median 161 cm(2) vs. 78 cm(2); u-test: p = 0.00714). Re-do surgery took significantly longer (median 229 min vs. 150 min; p < 0.00001) since recurrent disease required more often transversus abdominis release (70% vs. 47%). GRIP tended to be higher in recurrent repair (p = 0.01828). Complication rates (15%) and hospital stay were the same (6 vs. 6 days; p = 0.28462). After 1 year, no recurrence was detected in either group. Pain levels were equally low in both primary and recurrent hernia repairs (median NAS = 0 in both groups at rest and under load, p = 0.88866). Conclusion: Incisional hernia can safely and durably be repaired based on biomechanical principles both in primary and recurrent disease. The GRIP concept provides a base for the application of biomechanical principles in incisional hernia repair.
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spelling pubmed-87147532021-12-30 Primary and Recurrent Repair of Incisional Hernia Based on Biomechanical Considerations to Avoid Mesh-Related Complications Nessel, Regine Löffler, Thorsten Rinn, Johannes Lösel, Philipp Voss, Samuel Heuveline, Vincent Vollmer, Matthias Görich, Johannes Ludwig, Yannique-Maximilian Al-Hileh, Luai Kallinowski, Friedrich Front Surg Surgery Aim: Mechanical principles successfully guide the construction of polymer material composites in engineering. Since the abdominal wall is a polymer composite augmented with a textile during incisional hernia repair we ask: can incisional hernia be repaired safely and durably based on biomechanical principles? Material and Methods: Repair materials were assessed on a self-built bench test using pulse loads to elude influences on the reconstruction of the abdominal wall. Tissue elasticity was analyzed preoperatively as needed with computed tomography at rest and during Valsalva's maneuver. Preoperatively, the critical retention force of the reconstruction to pulse loads was calculated and a biomechanically durable repair was designed based on the needs of the individual patient. Intraoperatively, the design was adjusted as needed. Hernia meshes with high grip factors (Progrip(®), Dahlhausen(®) Cicat) were used for the repairs. Mesh sizes, fixation elements and reconstructive details were oriented on the biomechanical design. All patients recieved single-shot antibiosis. Patients were discharged after full ambulation was achieved. Results: A total of 163 patients (82 males and 81 females) were treated for incisional hernia in four hospitals by ten surgeons. Primary hernia was repaired in 119 patients. Recurrent hernia was operated on in 44 cases. Recurrent hernia was significantly larger (median 161 cm(2) vs. 78 cm(2); u-test: p = 0.00714). Re-do surgery took significantly longer (median 229 min vs. 150 min; p < 0.00001) since recurrent disease required more often transversus abdominis release (70% vs. 47%). GRIP tended to be higher in recurrent repair (p = 0.01828). Complication rates (15%) and hospital stay were the same (6 vs. 6 days; p = 0.28462). After 1 year, no recurrence was detected in either group. Pain levels were equally low in both primary and recurrent hernia repairs (median NAS = 0 in both groups at rest and under load, p = 0.88866). Conclusion: Incisional hernia can safely and durably be repaired based on biomechanical principles both in primary and recurrent disease. The GRIP concept provides a base for the application of biomechanical principles in incisional hernia repair. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC8714753/ /pubmed/34977141 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2021.764470 Text en Copyright © 2021 Nessel, Löffler, Rinn, Lösel, Voss, Heuveline, Vollmer, Görich, Ludwig, Al-Hileh and Kallinowski. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Surgery
Nessel, Regine
Löffler, Thorsten
Rinn, Johannes
Lösel, Philipp
Voss, Samuel
Heuveline, Vincent
Vollmer, Matthias
Görich, Johannes
Ludwig, Yannique-Maximilian
Al-Hileh, Luai
Kallinowski, Friedrich
Primary and Recurrent Repair of Incisional Hernia Based on Biomechanical Considerations to Avoid Mesh-Related Complications
title Primary and Recurrent Repair of Incisional Hernia Based on Biomechanical Considerations to Avoid Mesh-Related Complications
title_full Primary and Recurrent Repair of Incisional Hernia Based on Biomechanical Considerations to Avoid Mesh-Related Complications
title_fullStr Primary and Recurrent Repair of Incisional Hernia Based on Biomechanical Considerations to Avoid Mesh-Related Complications
title_full_unstemmed Primary and Recurrent Repair of Incisional Hernia Based on Biomechanical Considerations to Avoid Mesh-Related Complications
title_short Primary and Recurrent Repair of Incisional Hernia Based on Biomechanical Considerations to Avoid Mesh-Related Complications
title_sort primary and recurrent repair of incisional hernia based on biomechanical considerations to avoid mesh-related complications
topic Surgery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8714753/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34977141
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2021.764470
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