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Comparison Study in Different Sutures Techniques in Reduction of Known Abdominoplasty Complications and Improving Patients' Post-operative Outcomes

C

CHU Brugmann University Hospital

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Abdominoplasty

Treatments

Procedure: Classical closures
Procedure: Running subcutaneous sutures technique

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05490602
CHUB-Raei Ahmad

Details and patient eligibility

About

After an important weight loss abdominoplasty has become one of the most frequent interventions to remove excess skin to achieve the best cosmetic and body perception psychological results after weight loss. The American Society of Plastic surgeons have published documents in 2004 indicating a 344% increase in the number of abdominoplasty cases.

Dog ears is one of the classical complications in body contouring and abdominoplasty which needs a scar revision to achieve the optimum cosmetic result. It's due to bad tension from the closed scar.

In a classical abdominoplasty wound closure subcuticular, (or intradermal) sutures can be interrupted or placed in a running fashion. Such a technique obviates the need for external skin sutures and circumvents the possibility of suture marks in the skin. Other techniques have been described in the literature to reduce abdominoplasty complication (seroma, hematoma, infection, dog ear, flap necrosis etc.. ) such as classical high lateral tension and lipo-aspiration on preventing dog ears and elongation scar was evaluated and progressive tension sutures. The running subcutaneous sutures that consist of running sutures in the profound and superficial dermis without knotting the thread(suture) showed less dog ears occurrence and other complications which leads to more patient satisfaction and less scar revision. Dog ear is referred to as a puckering of the skin that appears sometimes at the end of a scar, especially after procedures that involve some degree of skin tightening or when skin after the end of the scar is looser than skin along the scar itself creating a small excess of skin where the incision ends.

So far there's no reported epidemiology for dog ears in the literature, however it's mentioned in some papers where it's a common complication and reason for scar revision in abdominoplasty and breast reduction surgery.

The aim of this study is to compare the incidence of dog ear and other complications in classical abdominoplasty closure to running subcutaneous sutures, method, which decreases dog ear incidence, wound dehiscence, infection and hypertrophic scar which are actually quite common after abdominoplasty. This allows to avoid a scar correction surgery and have a better aesthetic outcome. The investigators also evaluate the amelioration of sexual activity after a pubis-pexy using SAQ(Sexual Activity Questionnaire).

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Adult women at our department undergoing primary abdominoplasty with transposition of umbilicus with or without liposuction

Exclusion criteria

  • Age <18 or >65 years
  • History of chemotherapy
  • Smoker patient, diabetic patient
  • Male patient
  • < 6 months postpartum
  • Non-compliant patient

Trial design

100 participants in 2 patient groups

Running subcutaneous sutures technique
Description:
Abdominoplasty patients will be recruited. 50 patients will undergo the running subcutaneous sutures technique closures.
Treatment:
Procedure: Running subcutaneous sutures technique
Classical closures
Description:
Abdominoplasty patients will be recruited. 50 patients will undergo classical closures.
Treatment:
Procedure: Classical closures

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ahmad Raei

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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