• J. Am. Coll. Surg. · Apr 2003

    Surgical treatment of large incisional hernias by an intraperitoneal Dacron mesh and an aponeurotic graft.

    • Antoine Hamy, Patrick Pessaux, Stéphanie Mucci-Hennekinne, Serge Radriamananjo, Nicolas Regenet, and Jean-Pierre Arnaud.
    • Department of Visceral Surgery, CHU-Angers, 4 rue Larrey, Angers 49100, France.
    • J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2003 Apr 1; 196 (4): 531-4.

    BackgroundThe therapeutic problems of giant incisional hernias of the abdominal wall are difficult to resolve. The technique of repair must make up for the loss of abdominal wall substance and reestablish the interplay of the abdominal musculature. The use of prosthetic materials complies with these two imperatives. The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the results of surgical treatment of postoperative incisional hernias by intraperitoneal insertion of Dacron (DuPont) mesh and an aponeurotic graft.Study DesignWe prospectively studied 350 consecutive patients who were operated on for giant postoperative incisional hernia.ResultsPostoperative mortality was 0.6%. Seven patients (2%) developed subcutaneous infections that did not affect the prostheses. Another seven patients (2%) developed deep-seated infections that necessitated removal of the mesh in five cases. Eleven patients (3.1%) had recurrence of incisional hernia.ConclusionsThis prospective study shows that the intraperitoneal positioning of Dacron mesh and an aponeurotic graft can efficiently treat giant abdominal wall hernias.

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