Mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.

Hernia repair is the most common surgical procedure in the world. Augmentation with synthetic meshes has gained importance in recent decades. Most of the published work about hernia meshes focuses on the surgical technique, outcome in terms of mortality and morbidity and the recurrence rate. Appropr...

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Main Authors: Peter P Pott, Markus L R Schwarz, Ralf Gundling, Kai Nowak, Peter Hohenberger, Eric D Roessner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3470559?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e87baed000784194a52d882cd744f0942020-11-24T21:30:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01710e4697810.1371/journal.pone.0046978Mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.Peter P PottMarkus L R SchwarzRalf GundlingKai NowakPeter HohenbergerEric D RoessnerHernia repair is the most common surgical procedure in the world. Augmentation with synthetic meshes has gained importance in recent decades. Most of the published work about hernia meshes focuses on the surgical technique, outcome in terms of mortality and morbidity and the recurrence rate. Appropriate biomechanical and engineering terminology is frequently absent. Meshes are under continuous development but there is little knowledge in the public domain about their mechanical properties. In the presented experimental study we investigated the mechanical properties of several widely available meshes according to German Industrial Standards (DIN ISO).Six different meshes were assessed considering longitudinal and transverse direction in a uni-axial tensile test. Based on the force/displacement curve, the maximum force, breaking strain, and stiffness were computed. According to the maximum force the values were assigned to the groups weak and strong to determine a base for comparison. We discovered differences in the maximum force (11.1±6.4 to 100.9±9.4 N/cm), stiffness (0.3±0.1 to 4.6±0.5 N/mm), and breaking strain (150±6% to 340±20%) considering the direction of tension.The measured stiffness and breaking strength vary widely among available mesh materials for hernia repair, and most of the materials show significant anisotropy in their mechanical behavior. Considering the forces present in the abdominal wall, our results suggest that some meshes should be implanted in an appropriate orientation, and that information regarding the directionality of their mechanical properties should be provided by the manufacturers.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3470559?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter P Pott
Markus L R Schwarz
Ralf Gundling
Kai Nowak
Peter Hohenberger
Eric D Roessner
spellingShingle Peter P Pott
Markus L R Schwarz
Ralf Gundling
Kai Nowak
Peter Hohenberger
Eric D Roessner
Mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Peter P Pott
Markus L R Schwarz
Ralf Gundling
Kai Nowak
Peter Hohenberger
Eric D Roessner
author_sort Peter P Pott
title Mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.
title_short Mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.
title_full Mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.
title_fullStr Mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.
title_sort mechanical properties of mesh materials used for hernia repair and soft tissue augmentation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Hernia repair is the most common surgical procedure in the world. Augmentation with synthetic meshes has gained importance in recent decades. Most of the published work about hernia meshes focuses on the surgical technique, outcome in terms of mortality and morbidity and the recurrence rate. Appropriate biomechanical and engineering terminology is frequently absent. Meshes are under continuous development but there is little knowledge in the public domain about their mechanical properties. In the presented experimental study we investigated the mechanical properties of several widely available meshes according to German Industrial Standards (DIN ISO).Six different meshes were assessed considering longitudinal and transverse direction in a uni-axial tensile test. Based on the force/displacement curve, the maximum force, breaking strain, and stiffness were computed. According to the maximum force the values were assigned to the groups weak and strong to determine a base for comparison. We discovered differences in the maximum force (11.1±6.4 to 100.9±9.4 N/cm), stiffness (0.3±0.1 to 4.6±0.5 N/mm), and breaking strain (150±6% to 340±20%) considering the direction of tension.The measured stiffness and breaking strength vary widely among available mesh materials for hernia repair, and most of the materials show significant anisotropy in their mechanical behavior. Considering the forces present in the abdominal wall, our results suggest that some meshes should be implanted in an appropriate orientation, and that information regarding the directionality of their mechanical properties should be provided by the manufacturers.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3470559?pdf=render
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