Ventral/Incisional Hernias

Differential

· Ventral/incisional hernia

· Diastasis Recti – fascia intact, common in post-partum women and obese men

· Umbilical Hernia, Epigastric hernia

Workup

· H&P

o Previous surgeries, complications

o Activity level

o BMI

o Identify risk factors – smoking, obesity, DM, steroids, immunosuppressed, poor nutrition

o Distinguish between chronically incarcerated vs. acutely incarcerated hernia

· Imaging

o CT scan

o RUQ US to rule out other causes of abdominal pain

· Labs – LFTs, amylase, WBC – rule out other causes of abdominal pain.

Diagnosis & Tx

· Symptomatic ventral hernia

· Asymptomatic ventral hernia

· Incarcerated ventral hernia

Surgical approach

· Open Technique

o Inlay (bridging the defect with Mesh-not recommended for permanent repair, highest rates of recurrence)

o Onlay (Covering defect with Mesh and Fascia overlap)

o Underlay (placing mesh in a retrorectus position or intraperitoneally with fascial overlap-method with least recurrences and recommended if feasible)

· Components Separation – The fascia may be re-approximated using this technique.

o Often used in conjunction with Mesh placement.

· Laparoscopic Repair

o Insufflate abdomen, place ports lateral enough to allow for at least 4 cm of mesh to fascia overlap.

o Perform sharp/blunt adhesiolysis of viscera. Minimize electrocautery use.

o Identify and mark boundaries of hernia defect on anterior abdominal wall.

o You may or may not re-approximate the edges of the defect.

o Select and size mesh to allow 4-5 cm overlap. Prepare mesh with sutures and insert through 10 mm port or incision.

o Insert Mesh, unroll, and use a suture passer to pass tacking sutures through anterior abdominal wall.

o Once mesh positioned appropriately, use a 5mm circular tacker to secure Mesh at 1 cm intervals to ensure all defects are covered.

Postoperative management

§ Transabdominal sutures and tacks can lead to significant post-op pain.

§ Pts undergoing extensive adhesiolysis should be observed as an inpatient.

§ Seromas are common (as the hernia sack is not excised). The vast majority resolve spontaneously by 3 months. Aspiration should be avoid.

§ Post op use of abdominal binder may help prevent seroma formation.

§ Complications: ileus (2-3%), hematoma, trocar site infection, missed enterotomy, pulmonary complications.

Important Points

Incisional hernias are common after laparotomy.

Repair usual performed for symptoms, rather than incarceration or strangulation.

Avoidance of enterotomy/contamination is critical.