• Southern medical journal · Apr 1995

    Ventral hernia and other complications of 1,000 midline incisions.

    • M A Carlson, K A Ludwig, and R E Condon.
    • Department of Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 53226, USA.
    • South. Med. J. 1995 Apr 1; 88 (4): 450-3.

    AbstractWe report the outcome in 1,079 consecutive clean or clean-contaminated midline abdominal incisions closed with running 0-loop nylon suture after both elective and emergency operations done between 1984 and 1991. Postoperatively, 79 patients were lost to follow-up, resulting in 1,000 having long-term follow-up. Mean follow-up among these patients was 22 months. Early wound complications included subcutaneous wound infection (18), deep wound infection (17), dehiscence (13), fistula (2), and suture sinus (2). A ventral hernia developed in 42 (4.2%) cases during follow-up. By chi-square analysis, wound infection, dehiscence, class of clean-contaminated wound, patient age > 65, or previous midline abdominal incision were not identified as risk factors for development of a ventral hernia. Reuse of a previous midline incision in combination with any wound infection was associated with an increased risk of subsequent ventral hernia (stepwise regression). In our experience, running closure of a vertical midline abdominal wound has not been associated with an excessive incidence of wound complications or of ventral hernia.

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