Parastomal Hernia Repair with Intraperitoneal Mesh

Purpose. Parastomal hernia is a common complication following a stoma and may cause leakage or incarceration. No optimal treatment has been established, and existing methods using mesh repair are associated with high recurrence rates and a considerable risk for short- and long-term complications inc...

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Main Authors: Pia Näsvall, Jörgen Rutegård, Michael Dahlberg, Ulf Gunnarsson, Karin Strigård
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2017-01-01
Series:Surgery Research and Practice
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/8597463
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spelling doaj-f91f520c66df4fde8219e107cee16fb52020-11-25T00:48:23ZengHindawi LimitedSurgery Research and Practice2356-77592356-61242017-01-01201710.1155/2017/85974638597463Parastomal Hernia Repair with Intraperitoneal MeshPia Näsvall0Jörgen Rutegård1Michael Dahlberg2Ulf Gunnarsson3Karin Strigård4Department of Surgery, Sunderby Hospital, Umeå University, Luleå, SwedenDepartment of Surgery and Perioperative Sciences, Umeå University, Umeå, SwedenDepartment of Surgery, Sunderby Hospital, Umeå University, Luleå, SwedenDepartment of Surgery and Perioperative Sciences, Umeå University, Umeå, SwedenDepartment of Surgery and Perioperative Sciences, Umeå University, Umeå, SwedenPurpose. Parastomal hernia is a common complication following a stoma and may cause leakage or incarceration. No optimal treatment has been established, and existing methods using mesh repair are associated with high recurrence rates and a considerable risk for short- and long-term complications including death. A double-layer intraperitoneal on-lay mesh (IPOM), the Parastomal Hernia Patch (BARD™), consisting of ePTFE and polypropylene, has been developed and tailored to avoid recurrence. To evaluate the safety of and recurrence rate using this mesh, a nonrandomised prospective multicentre study was performed. Method. Fifty patients requiring surgery for parastomal hernia were enrolled. Clinical examination and CT scan prior to surgery were performed. All patients were operated on using the Parastomal Hernia Patch (BARD). Postoperative follow-up at one month and one year was scheduled to detect complications and hernia recurrence. Results. The postoperative complication rate at one month was 15/50 (30%). The parastomal hernia recurrence rate at one year was 11/50 (22%). The reoperation rate at one month was 7/50 (14%), and further 5/50 (10%) patients were reoperated on during the following eleven months.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/8597463
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pia Näsvall
Jörgen Rutegård
Michael Dahlberg
Ulf Gunnarsson
Karin Strigård
spellingShingle Pia Näsvall
Jörgen Rutegård
Michael Dahlberg
Ulf Gunnarsson
Karin Strigård
Parastomal Hernia Repair with Intraperitoneal Mesh
Surgery Research and Practice
author_facet Pia Näsvall
Jörgen Rutegård
Michael Dahlberg
Ulf Gunnarsson
Karin Strigård
author_sort Pia Näsvall
title Parastomal Hernia Repair with Intraperitoneal Mesh
title_short Parastomal Hernia Repair with Intraperitoneal Mesh
title_full Parastomal Hernia Repair with Intraperitoneal Mesh
title_fullStr Parastomal Hernia Repair with Intraperitoneal Mesh
title_full_unstemmed Parastomal Hernia Repair with Intraperitoneal Mesh
title_sort parastomal hernia repair with intraperitoneal mesh
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Surgery Research and Practice
issn 2356-7759
2356-6124
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Purpose. Parastomal hernia is a common complication following a stoma and may cause leakage or incarceration. No optimal treatment has been established, and existing methods using mesh repair are associated with high recurrence rates and a considerable risk for short- and long-term complications including death. A double-layer intraperitoneal on-lay mesh (IPOM), the Parastomal Hernia Patch (BARD™), consisting of ePTFE and polypropylene, has been developed and tailored to avoid recurrence. To evaluate the safety of and recurrence rate using this mesh, a nonrandomised prospective multicentre study was performed. Method. Fifty patients requiring surgery for parastomal hernia were enrolled. Clinical examination and CT scan prior to surgery were performed. All patients were operated on using the Parastomal Hernia Patch (BARD). Postoperative follow-up at one month and one year was scheduled to detect complications and hernia recurrence. Results. The postoperative complication rate at one month was 15/50 (30%). The parastomal hernia recurrence rate at one year was 11/50 (22%). The reoperation rate at one month was 7/50 (14%), and further 5/50 (10%) patients were reoperated on during the following eleven months.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/8597463
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AT michaeldahlberg parastomalherniarepairwithintraperitonealmesh
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