Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3319418 Seminars in Colon and Rectal Surgery 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Parastomal hernia is a common clinical problem that is difficult to manage. Although surgical repair is recommended for the majority of other incisional hernias to prevent the complications of incarceration, obstruction, or strangulation, most authors recommend nonoperative management of parastomal hernias. Surgical management is usually reserved for those patients whose parastomal hernia results in intractable difficulty maintaining an effective stoma appliance or who develop a severe complication. This article reviews the nonoperative and operative management of parastomal hernias by fascial repair and stomal relocation. Unfortunately, no randomized trials exist to guide the surgeon in the choice between the accepted nonoperative and surgical management options. Fascial repair without a prosthetic should probably be used only in the rarest of circumstances. If stoma relocation is selected, the stoma should be relocated to the opposite side of the abdominal wall and reconstructed using techniques associated with the lowest risk of stoma-related complications and parastomal hernia. However, the best outcomes may require the use of a prosthetic either to either repair or prevent a parastomal hernia.

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