Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4282324 | The American Journal of Surgery | 2007 | 5 Pages |
BackgroundFascial closure after damage control or decompression laparotomy is not always possible. The result is a ventral hernia covered with skin grafts. Massive hernias impair bowel, bladder, and respiratory function and are displeasing aesthetically. Most repair methods provide inadequate closure of large full-thickness abdominal wall defects. We describe our method of repair using bilateral anterior abdominal bipedicle flaps over permanent mesh.MethodsWe reviewed 6 patients who underwent this repair method. This staged repair first involves flap elevation followed by delay. In the next stage, the hernia skin graft is excised, mesh is placed, and flaps are advanced to midline to cover the mesh.ResultsThe average hernia size was 885 ± 274 cm2 (28-cm wide × 31-cm vertical), with a range of up to 37-cm wide. An average of 3 surgeries were required for closure, with a mean hospital stay of 22 days. No patients developed hernia recurrence with a mean follow-up period of 23 months.ConclusionsThis method provides successful and durable closure of massive skin-grafted hernias.