Study of Incisional Hernia at a Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital

Mangesh Padamwar (1) , Anupam Kakade (2) , Ajonish Kamble (3) , Yashwant Lamture (4) , Meenakshi Yeola (5)
(1) Department of General Surgery, Datta Meghe Medical College, Shalinitai Meghe Hospital and Research Centre (Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences), Hingana, Nagpur-441110, India, India ,
(2) Department of General Surgery, Datta Meghe Medical College, Shalinitai Meghe Hospital and Research Centre (Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences), Hingana, Nagpur-441110, India, India ,
(3) Department of General Surgery, Datta Meghe Medical College, Shalinitai Meghe Hospital and Research Centre (Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences), Hingana, Nagpur-441110, India, India ,
(4) Department of General Surgery, Datta Meghe Medical College, Shalinitai Meghe Hospital and Research Centre (Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences), Hingana, Nagpur-441110, India, India ,
(5) Department of General Surgery, Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College, (Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences), Sawangi Meghe, Wardha, India, India

Abstract

Incisional hernia affects all age groups and involves both males and females. It can be defined as hernia, which protrudes through the surgical wound, which was healed incompletely. Incisional Hernia Management requires operative intervention most of the time. It may be corrected by laparoscopic repair with synthetic non-absorbable mesh or open anatomical repair.In partnership with Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College AVBR Hospital (Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences) Sawangi (Meghe), Wardha, Maharashtra, this work was performed in the Department of General Surgery at Datta Meghe Medical College and Shalinitai Meghe Hospital and Research Centre, Hingna, Nagpur. Over a year, 59 cases of diagnosed incisional hernia were included.33 males and 26 females were included. The mean age was years. A most common cause of Incisional Hernia (IH) post-operative wound infection(49.15%). In maximum cases, history was suggestive of emergency surgery (86.44%). Open mesh hernioplasty was the common procedure (57.62%), Lap mesh hernioplasty done in (25.42%) cases, and (16.94%) cases were treated by suture repair. There was no evidence of Recurrence in laparoscopic repair as open mesh hernioplasty has a recurrence rate of 03.57%, and suture repair cases showed 33.33% recurrence.Incisional Hernia and its occurrence can be taken care of by implementing all standard aseptic precautions, thereby avoiding chances of infection at the time of primary surgery wherein thorough peritoneal wash, proper techniques of wound closure and use of appropriate antibiotics is recommended. Management of IH with Laparoscopic mesh repair has an advantage in terms of less hospital stay, negligible rate of Recurrence though it is not cost-effective in the present scenario.

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Authors

Mangesh Padamwar
Anupam Kakade
pdrmangesh@gmail.com (Primary Contact)
Ajonish Kamble
Yashwant Lamture
Meenakshi Yeola
Mangesh Padamwar, Anupam Kakade, Ajonish Kamble, Yashwant Lamture, & Meenakshi Yeola. (2020). Study of Incisional Hernia at a Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital. International Journal of Research in Pharmaceutical Sciences, 11(2), 2591–2597. Retrieved from https://ijrps.com/home/article/view/1289

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