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On-lay Versus Pre-peritoneal Hernioplasty in Incisional Lumbar Hernia

A

Assiut University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Lumbar Hernia

Treatments

Procedure: Mesh

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06757998
Hernioplasty in lumbar hernia

Details and patient eligibility

About

To compare between the outcome of on-lay and pre-peritoneal techniques of hernioplasty in incisional lumbar hernia repair.

Full description

Lumbar hernia is found as a challenge even in the era of advanced medicine, due to its rarity which complicate its diagnosis and treatment[1]. Lumbar hernia is the protrusion of an organ intra-peritoneal or extra-peritoneal tissue through a congenital or acquired defect in the posterolateral abdominal wall[2]. Incisional Lumbar hernia is among the types of lumbar hernia that accounts for 25% of cases[3]. Post abdominal surgeries, the tissue strength can only regain 80% of its maximum tensile power under perfect conditions. Thus, each abdominal surgery is a predisposing factor for lumbar incisional hernia [4] Primary closure of the defect with sutures, has proven to have a high failure rate so the integration of the mesh in hernia repair has significantly flattened the recurrence curve. Taking the advantage of Laplace's law, the mesh aims to reinforce or bridge the defect and distribute the intra-abdominal pressure across the entire synthetic sheet rather than just the defect. [5] The two most used mesh placing techniques are on-lay and pre-peritoneal. Each method has its benefits and drawbacks. [6] Some surgeons outweigh the on-lay technique to avoid extensive dissection. Thus, it is a faster and easier technique; nevertheless, there are several local wound issues. [7] The pre-peritoneal method allows the surgeon to apply the mesh posterior to the fascial plane in front of the peritoneum. The latter technique is gaining popularity with time [8]

Literature are deficient in comparing on-lay and pre-peritoneal technique in the repair of incisional lumbar hernia.

Enrollment

30 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Incisional lumbar hernia
  • Recurrent lumbar hernia
  • Age more than 16 years old

Exclusion criteria

  • Complicated lumbar hernia (irreducible, obstructed, strangulated hernia)
  • Denovo lumbar hernia

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Ibrahim Mostafa; Ali Fathy

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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