Hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagen

Usually an abdominal wall hernia is regarded as a mechanical problem with a local defect which has to be closed by technical means. Despite the introduction of several therapeutic improvements, recurrent hernias still appear in 10-15%. Therefore, reasons for a recurrence are discussed in...

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Main Authors: Klinge Uwe, Binnebosel Marcel, Rosch Raphael, Mertens Peter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2006-01-01
Series:Journal of Minimal Access Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journalofmas.com/article.asp?issn=0972-9941;year=2006;volume=2;issue=3;spage=151;epage=154;aulast=Klinge
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spelling doaj-d00160d90f0a456f90cf51bb58897fe82020-11-25T00:27:28ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsJournal of Minimal Access Surgery0972-99412006-01-0123151154Hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagenKlinge UweBinnebosel MarcelRosch RaphaelMertens PeterUsually an abdominal wall hernia is regarded as a mechanical problem with a local defect which has to be closed by technical means. Despite the introduction of several therapeutic improvements, recurrent hernias still appear in 10-15%. Therefore, reasons for a recurrence are discussed in a more fundamental way. It is assumed that a failure mainly depends on the quality of the repair. Correspondingly, in principle, the close causal relationship between the technical component and its failure during time is reflected by an s-shaped outcome curve. In contrast, the configuration of the outcome curve changes markedly if a breakdown is caused by numerous components. Then, the superposition of all incidence curves inevitably leads to a linear decline of the outcome curve without any s-shaped deformation. Regarding outcome curves after hernia repair, the cumulative incidences for recurrences of both incisional and inguinal hernia show a linear rise over years. Considering the configuration of outcome curves of patients with hernia disease, it may therefore be insufficient to explain a recurrence just by a failing technical repair. Rather, biological reasons should be suspected, such as a defective wound healing with impaired scarring process. Recent molecular-biological findings provide increasing evidence of underlying biochemical alterations in patients with recurrent hernia. Until predicting markers to identify patients with an impaired wound healing are available and considering the formation of insufficient scar as the underlying disease, the consequences for every surgical repair should be a supplementary reinforcement with nonabsorbable alloplastic nets as flat meshes with an extensive overlap.http://www.journalofmas.com/article.asp?issn=0972-9941;year=2006;volume=2;issue=3;spage=151;epage=154;aulast=KlingeBiologycollagenhernianetworkrecurrencewound healing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Klinge Uwe
Binnebosel Marcel
Rosch Raphael
Mertens Peter
spellingShingle Klinge Uwe
Binnebosel Marcel
Rosch Raphael
Mertens Peter
Hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagen
Journal of Minimal Access Surgery
Biology
collagen
hernia
network
recurrence
wound healing
author_facet Klinge Uwe
Binnebosel Marcel
Rosch Raphael
Mertens Peter
author_sort Klinge Uwe
title Hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagen
title_short Hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagen
title_full Hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagen
title_fullStr Hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagen
title_full_unstemmed Hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagen
title_sort hernia recurrence as a problem of biology and collagen
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Journal of Minimal Access Surgery
issn 0972-9941
publishDate 2006-01-01
description Usually an abdominal wall hernia is regarded as a mechanical problem with a local defect which has to be closed by technical means. Despite the introduction of several therapeutic improvements, recurrent hernias still appear in 10-15%. Therefore, reasons for a recurrence are discussed in a more fundamental way. It is assumed that a failure mainly depends on the quality of the repair. Correspondingly, in principle, the close causal relationship between the technical component and its failure during time is reflected by an s-shaped outcome curve. In contrast, the configuration of the outcome curve changes markedly if a breakdown is caused by numerous components. Then, the superposition of all incidence curves inevitably leads to a linear decline of the outcome curve without any s-shaped deformation. Regarding outcome curves after hernia repair, the cumulative incidences for recurrences of both incisional and inguinal hernia show a linear rise over years. Considering the configuration of outcome curves of patients with hernia disease, it may therefore be insufficient to explain a recurrence just by a failing technical repair. Rather, biological reasons should be suspected, such as a defective wound healing with impaired scarring process. Recent molecular-biological findings provide increasing evidence of underlying biochemical alterations in patients with recurrent hernia. Until predicting markers to identify patients with an impaired wound healing are available and considering the formation of insufficient scar as the underlying disease, the consequences for every surgical repair should be a supplementary reinforcement with nonabsorbable alloplastic nets as flat meshes with an extensive overlap.
topic Biology
collagen
hernia
network
recurrence
wound healing
url http://www.journalofmas.com/article.asp?issn=0972-9941;year=2006;volume=2;issue=3;spage=151;epage=154;aulast=Klinge
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AT mertenspeter herniarecurrenceasaproblemofbiologyandcollagen
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