Title: CASE PRESENTATION AND SHARING OF INFORMATION ON INCISIONAL HERNIA
1CASE PRESENTATION AND SHARING OF INFORMATION ON
INCISIONAL HERNIA
- by
- Michael Angelo L. Suñaz, M.D.
- Department of Surgery
- Ospital ng Maynila Medical Center
2R.C, 58/M TONDO, MANILA
3- CHIEF COMPLAINT BULGING ABDOMINAL MASS
4HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS
- 2 yrs PTA ? Px underwent E
- Exploratory
Laparotomy, - duodenorrhapy, omental
- patching for a
Perforated - PUD.
5HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS
- 22 months PTA ?noted bulging abdominal
- mass, about
the size of the - patients
fist, most noticeable - during
straining or prolonged - standing and
reduced - spontaneously
when the patient - assumed a
recumbent position. - (-) episode of vomiting
- (-) changes in BM
-
6HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS
-
- Gradual increase in the size of the abdominal
mass prompted consultation and subsequent
admission at the OMMC
7- PAST MEDICAL Hx
- s/p E Ex-Lap, duodenorrhaphy, omental patch
for Perforated Peptic Ulcer Disease OMMC July
2004 - No Hypertension
- No DM
- FAMILY Hx
- No heredofamilial disease noted
8- PERSONAL/SOCIAL Hx
- smoker, 20 pack-years, stopped last 2004
- occasional alcoholic beverage drinker
9PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- BP 120/80 CR89 RR 20 T36.5
- HEENT pink palpebral cojunctiva,anicteric
sclera, No NAD, No CLAD, No TPC - C/L SCE, no retractions, clear BS
- HEART adynamic precordium, NRRR, no murmur
10- ABDOMEN Flabby, NABS, soft, non-tender
- () healed midline incision
- () mass, soft, non-tender, reducible, around the
umbilicus with fascial defect approx 8 x 8 cms
around the umbilicus - () mass, soft, non-tender, reducible, 6 cms
above the umbilicus with fascial defect approx
2x2 cms.
11- EXTREMITIES full equal pulses, No edema
12SALIENT FEATURES
- 58 y/o, M
- 2-yr History of bulging abdominal mass, reducible
- Fascial defect approx 8 x 8 cms and 2 x 2 cms
- History of previous operation
-
13On and off bulge at the level of the abdominal
wall
14On and off bulge at the level of the abdominal
wall
Abdominal wall hernia
15On and off bulge at the level of the abdominal
wall
Abdominal wall hernia
History of operation bulge at incisional site
16On and off bulge at the level of the abdominal
wall
Abdominal wall hernia
History of operation bulge at incisional site
Incisional hernia
17On and off bulge at the level of the abdominal
wall
Abdominal wall hernia
History of operation bulge at incisional site
Incisional hernia
Not reducible
reducible
18On and off bulge at the level of the abdominal
wall
Abdominal wall hernia
History of operation bulge at incisional site
Incisional hernia
Not reducible
reducible
Defect on 1 site
Defect on 2 or more sites
19On and off bulge at the level of the abdominal
wall
Abdominal wall hernia
History of operation bulge at incisional site
Incisional hernia
Not reducible
reducible
Defect on 1 site
Defect on 2 or more sites
strangulated
Not strangulated
20Clinical Diagnosis
Diagnosis Certainty Treatment
Incisional Hernia without obstruction or gangrene 99 Surgical
Incisional Hernia with obstruction or gangrene 1 Surgical
21BASIS
- Patient with history of
- on and off bulging mass on incision site,
- s/p E Exploratory Laparotomy without any
- vomiting or BM changes
22Do I need a para-clinical diagnostic procedure?
23Pretreatment Diagnosis
Diagnosis Certainty Treatment
Incisional Hernia without obstruction or gangrene 99 Surgical
Incisional Hernia with obstruction or gangrene 1 Surgical
24TREATMENT
- PRETREATMENT DIAGNOSIS
- Incisional Hernia without obstruction or gangrene
s/p E Ex-Lap July 2004
25TREATMENT
- GOALS OF TREATMENT
- - reduce hernial content
- - repair the fascial defect
- - prevent recurrence of incisional hernia
- after the repair
26TREATMENT OPTIONS
TREATMENT BENEFIT RISK COST AVAIL
Non-surgical (binders, corsets) gtMay be used pre-operatively to TEMPORARILY reduce large necked hernias of high risk patients gtno repair of fascial defect Injury to skin or bowel due to the pressure may mask signs of incarceration or strangulation P500-1000 available
Surgical gtreduction of hernial content gtrepair of fascial defect Up to 50 recurrence rate with 5 prosthesis related infection rate OR cost 6,000-40,000 available
27TREATMENT OPTIONS
TREATMENT BENEFIT RISK COST AVAIL
Open Surgery gtreduction of hernial contents gtrepair of hernial defect gtWider incision gtmore invasive gtlonger recovery time OR cost P6000 (if with prosthesis) Readily available
Laparoscopic Surgery gtreduction of hernial contents gtrepair of hernial defect gtsmaller incision gtless invasive gtshorter recovery time OR cost P40000 Not readily available
28TREATMENT OPTIONS
TREATMENT BENEFIT RISK COST AVAIL
Simple non-prosthesis repair gtreduction of hernial contents gtrepair of hernial defect 25-55 recurrence rate1 OR cost available
Incisional herniorrhaphy with mesh gtreduction of hernial contents gtrepair of hernial defect 1-20 recurrence rate Prosthesis-related infection (5) 2 OR cost P6,000 available
29TREATMENT OPTIONS
TREATMENT BENEFIT RISK COST AVAIL
Onlay prosthetic repair gtreduction of hernial contents gtrepair of hernial defect gtRecurrence rate of 2.5 13.3 gtSubprosthetic Hernia gtWound healing complications due to direct contact of prosthesis with environment during wound revision OR cost P6000 available
Sublay prosthetic repair gtreduction of hernial contents gtrepair of hernial defect Recurrence rate of 1 - 20 OR cost P6000 available
30TREATMENT OF CHOICE
SUBLAY PROSTHESIS REPAIR
31PREOPERATIVE PREPARATION
- Informed consent
- Psychosocial support
- Optimize patients health
- Screen for any condition that will interfere with
treatment - Prepare materials
-
32OPERATIVE TECHNIQUE
- Patient supine under CLEA
- Asepsis/Antisepsis
- Sterile drapes
- Excision of scarred incision skin
- Subfascial flap dissection separating rectus from
peritoneum/hernial sac - Hernial sac opened
33OPERATIVE TECHNIQUE cont..
- Inspection of intraabdominal organs for gut
adhesions and additional fascial defects - Silk suture laid on peritoneum for mesh anchoring
- Interrupted Silk 2-0 sutures approximating small
superior fascial defect - Excess peritoneum trimmed
- Closure of peritoneum with chromic 3-0 simple
continuous
34OPERATIVE TECHNIQUE cont..
- Mesh laid over the area of larger defect
- Anchoring sutures tied
- Closure of fascia with simple continuous suture,
Vicryl-0 - Hemostasis
- Running continuous with Vicryl 2-0 subcutaneous
- Subcuticular Vicryl 4-0
- Correct sponge, instrument and needle count
- Dry Sterile Dressing
35OPERATIVE TECHNIQUE
36OPERATIVE FINDINGS
- 7 cms fascial defect from umbilicus down and 1 cm
above - Small fascial defect approx 1x1 cms, 6 cms
superior to the umbilicus, left of the midline - No incarcerated bowel noted
37OPERATION DONE
- Incisional Herniorrhaphy with subfascial
prosthesis
38POST-OP CARE
- Sufficient analgesia
- Nutrition
- Wound care
- Monitoring of complications and treat as
indicated - Advice on home care of wound
39POST-OP CARE
- Advice on ff-up plans
- Avoid straining
- Avoid lifting heavy objects/ learn the proper
mechanics of lifting - High fiber diet
- Quit smoking
- Maintain a healthy weight
40SHARING OF INFORMATION
41INCISIONAL HERNIA
- occur as a complication of previous surgery
- Causes
- 1. poor surgical technique
- 2. rough handling of tissues
- 3. use of rapidly degraded
- absorbable suture
materials - 4. closure of the abdomen under
- tension,
- 5. infection
42- 6. Male sex
- 7. advanced age
- 8. morbid obesity
9.abdominal distention - 10. cigarette smoking
- 11. pulmonary disease
- 12. hypoalbuminemia
-
43- The incidence of incisional hernia was
significantly lower when nonabsorbable sutures
were used in a continuous closure however,
44- the incidence of suture sinus formation (9) and
that of wound pain were significantly higher
45- The best definition
- any abdominal wall gap, with or without a
bulge, that is perceptible on clinical
examination or imaging by 1 year after the index
operation. -
46- Incidence 3 20 (double if the index operation
is associated with infection) -
47- Risk midline - 10.5
- transverse - 7.5,
- paramedian - 2.5
48- Early evisceration is commonly seen among males.
49- Incarceration and strangulation occur with
significant frequency, and recurrence rates after
operative repair approach 50.
50Classification of incisional hernias
- I. According to localization (modified Chevrel)
- Vertical
- 1.1. Midline above or below umbilicus
- 1.2. Midline including umbilicus right or left
- 1.3. Paramedian right or left
- Transversal
- 2.1. Above or below umbilicus right or left
- 2.2. Crossed midline or not
51Classification of incisional hernias
- Oblique
- 3.1. Above or below umbilicus right or left
- Combined (midline oblique midline
parastomal etc)
52Classification of incisional hernias
- II. According to size
- Small (lt5 cm in width or length)
- Medium (5-10 cm in width or length)
- Large (gt10 cm in width or length)
53Classification of incisional hernias
- III. According to recurrence
- Primary incisional hernia
- Recurrence of an incisional hernia (1., 2., 3.,
etc. with type of hernioplasty adaptation,
Mayo-duplication, prosthetic implantation,
autodermal etc.)
54Classification of incisional hernias
- IV. According to the situation at the hernia
gate - Reducible with or without obstruction
- Irreducible with or without obstruction
55Classification of incisional hernias
- V. According to symptoms
- Asymptomatic
- Symptomatic
56Operative Technique
- I. Simple Non-Prosthesis Repair
- II. Posthesis Repair
- a. Onlay Prosthetic Repair
- b. Prosthetic Bridging Repair
- c. Combined Fascial and Mesh
- Closure
- d. Sublay Prosthetic Repair
57Simple Non-Prosthesis Repair
- recurrence rate ranges from 25 to 55
- According to the experts' recommendation, the
fascia-duplication should only be used for small
incisional hernias (3 cm or less) and if the
reconstruction of the repair is oriented
horizontally
58- monofile non-resorbable material - U-suture by
Mayo-duplication or running suture with a
suturewound length ratio of 41.
59Prefascial (Onlay) Prosthetic Implantation
(Chevrel-technique)
- The recurrence rates indicated in the literature
vary between 2.5 and 13.3 - Authors using this technique estimate the amount
of wound healing complications after this
operation to range between 4 and 26 and
estimate the rate of prosthesis removals between
0 and 2.5
60Prefascial (Onlay) Prosthetic Implantation
(Chevrel-technique)
- The main disadvantage of the onlay technique is
the direct contact of the prosthesis (partly or
completely) with the environment during the wound
revision, which can cause wound healing
complications. - "subprosthetic hernia"
61Subfascial Prosthetic Repair (Sublay Technique)
- retromuscular approach
- placement of a large prosthesis in the space
between the abdominal muscles and the peritoneum. - To date, no controlled study has been published
that has tested the sublay technique versus the
onlay technique
62Subfascial Prosthetic Repair (Sublay Technique)
63Subfascial Prosthetic Repair (Sublay Technique)
64Choice of Prosthesis
- Type I. - Totally macroporous prostheses (pores
larger than 75 µm) - Marlex
- Monofilament polypropylene
- Prolene
- Double filament polypropylene
- Atrium
- Monofilament polypropylene
65Choice of Prosthesis
- Type II. - Totally microporous prostheses (pores
less than 10 µm) - Gore-Tex
- Expanded PTFE
66Choice of Prosthesis
- Type III - Mix-prostheses (macroporous with
multifilamentous or microporous components) - Teflon
- PTFE mesh
- Mersilene
- Braided Dacron mesh
- Surgipro
- Braided polypropylene mesh
- MicroMesh
- Perforated PTFE patch
67Autodermal hernioplasty
- According to the literature, the recurrence rates
of the autodermal hernioplastic and the
prosthetic strengthening are comparable
68Laparoscopic Hernia Repair
- may be considered for any ventral hernia in which
mesh will be used for the repair. - Contraindication suspected strangulated bowel or
loss of domain
69Poor results of Incisional Hernia Repair
- 1. preexisting comorbid conditions
- 2. cancer-related debilitation
- 3. morbid obesity
- 4. use of steroids
- 5. chemotherapy
70MCQ
- 1. Which of the following is a contraindication
for laparoscopic hernia repair? - a. patients with suspected strangulated bowel
- b. Swiss cheese hernia
- c. defects in close proximity to the
bony - margins of the abdomen
- d. dense adhesions
71MCQ
- 1. Which of the following is a contraindication
for laparoscopic hernia repair? - a. patients with suspected strangulated
- bowel
- b. Swiss cheese hernia
- c. defects in close proximity to the
bony - margins of the abdomen
- d. dense adhesions
72- 2. If an incisional hernia has a fascial gap of
10 x 6 cms, it is considered to be? - a. Small
- b. Medium
- c. Large
- d. Not enough data to classify
73- 2. If an incisional hernia has a fascial gap of
10 x 6 cms, it is considered to be? - a. Small
- b. Medium
- c. Large
- d. Not enough data to classify
74- 3. Which of the following is not considered to
be a predisposing condition for the development
of incisional hernia? - a. emphysema
- b. deep surgical site infection
- c. BMI of 24
- d. Poor surgical technique
75- 3. Which of the following is not considered to
be a predisposing condition for the development
of incisional hernia? - a. emphysema
- b. deep surgical site infection
- c. BMI of 24
- d. Poor surgical technique
76MCR
- A 1, 2, and 3 are correct
- B 1 and 3 are correct
- C 2 and 4 are correct
- D only 4 is correct
- E none are correct
77MCR
- I. Which of the following is true of simple
non-prosthetic repair of incisional hernia? - 1. recurrence rate ranges from 25 to 55.
- 2. If there is a solitary defect 3 cm or less in
diameter, - primary closure with absorbable
suture material is - appropriate.
- 3. Less time consuming and assoc with less
- complication
- 4. Because of the high recurrence rates, the
simple - fascia-duplication can no longer be
regarded as the - "gold standard"
78MCR
- I. Which of the following is true of simple
non-prosthetic repair of incisional hernia? - 1. recurrence rate ranges from 25 to 55.
- 2. If there is a solitary defect 3 cm or less in
- diameter, primary closure with
absorbable - suture material is appropriate.
- 3. Less time consuming and assoc with less
- complication
- 4. Because of the high recurrence rates, the
- simple fascia-duplication can no
longer be - regarded as the "gold standard"
79- II. Which of the ff is/are true about prosthesis
repair? - 1. Prefascial prosthesis Implantation
subprosthesis hernia - 2. Sublay Technique large prosthesis in the
space - between the abdominal muscles
and the peritoneum. - 3. Combined Fascial and Mesh Closure posterior
fascia - is closed primarily, The anterior
fascia is then bridged - with a prosthesis
- 4. Sublay Technique not suited for
swiss-cheese hernia
80- II. Which of the ff is/are true about prosthesis
repair? - 1. Prefascial prosthesis Implantation
subprosthesis - hernia
- 2. Sublay Technique large prosthesis in the
space - between the abdominal muscles
and the - peritoneum.
- 3. Combined Fascial and Mesh Closure
posterior - fascia is closed primarily, The
anterior fascia is - then bridged with a prosthesis
- 4. Sublay Technique not suited for
swiss-cheese hernia
81 82References
- Fitzgibobns, et al open hernia repair, Section 5
Chapter 27 ACS Principles and Practice 2003