Outcomes After Epigastric Hernia Repair in Women.
Epigastric HerniaNationwide cohort study on women undergoing epigastric hernia repair
CT and Clinical Features of Internal Hernia
CT Images of Internal HerniaClinical OutcomesResearchers retrospectively reviewed patients with internal hernia that confirmed by surgical exploration between Feb. 2012 and Feb. 2018. and analysis the Medical records and MDCT images to investigate the clinical and radiological features of internal hernia.
Prevalence of Sarcopenia and Undernutrition in Patients With Cirrhosis and Abdominal Hernia
CirrhosisSarcopenia3 moreThe study evaluates whether sarcopenia influences the prevalence of abdominal hernias in patients with cirrhosis.
Outcomes of Open Versus Robotic-assisted Laparoscopic Posterior Component Separation in Complex...
Abdominal Wall HerniaThis is a retrospective European multicenter study evaluating surgical treatment of patients with a complex ventral incisional hernia using robotic-assisted laparoscopic transversus abdominis release (rTAR) or open transversus abdominis release (oTAR).
Physiologic Tension of the Abdominal Wall
Abdominal Wall HerniaRestoring the physiologic tension of the abdominal wall is a key concept in abdominal wall reconstruction. Yet little is known quantitatively about the normal tension of the abdominal wall. To better understand the ideal tension for abdominal wall reconstruction, the physiologic tension of the abdominal wall needs to be measured. This study aims to measure the tension of the abdominal wall during laparotomy closure.
Collagen Alterations in Patients With Abdominal Wall Hernias
HerniaAbdominalThe aim of this study was to evaluate collagen turnover in patients with multiple hernias
Environmental Risk Factors of Mesh Infection After Abdominal Wall Hernia Repair
Surgical Site InfectionMesh infection is the main complication in abdominal hernia repair. In case of infection, a conservative management of mesh is not always possible. The removal of the mesh (occurring in 5.1% to 8% of wall hernia repair) increases the risk of recurrence and surgical morbidity. Within our digestive surgery department (CHRU de Nancy), an infection rate of 10.7% (32 cases out of 298 patients with wall hernia repair) was observed between January 2016 and December 2018. This rate is higher than those usually described in the literature. Several studies have identified predictors of mesh infection and explantation after abdominal wall hernia repair. The influence of the operating environment (temperature, hygrometry, pressure, number of people present, etc.) has, to our knowledge, never been studied. If the risk of prosthesis infection is influenced by one or more of these extrinsic characteristics, it is possible to act on these practices to reduce this risk. The main purpose of this study is to identify the characteristics specific to the intervention and the operating environment associated with mesh infection after abdominal wall hernia reconstruction