Publication | Closed Access
Mechanical Response of the Herniated Human Abdomen to the Placement of Different Prostheses
32
Citations
34
References
2013
Year
Hernia SurgeryVisceral SurgeryAnatomical ModelSurgeryAnatomyOrthopaedic SurgeryAnisotropic Medium-weight MeshGross AnatomyBiomechanicsAnisotropic ImplantsSurgical PlanningProsthesisTransvaginal MeshMechanical ResponseComputer-assisted SurgeryDifferent ProsthesesAnisotropic Light-weight MeshHerniated Human AbdomenAnesthesiaMedicineSurgical Innovation
This paper describes a method designed to model the repaired herniated human abdomen just after surgery and examine its static mechanical response to the maximum intra-abdominal pressure provoked by a physiological movement (standing cough). The model is based on the real geometry of the human abdomen bearing a large incisional hernia with several anatomical structures differentiated by MRI. To analyze the outcome of hernia repair, the surgical procedure was simulated by modeling a prosthesis placed over the hernia. Three surgical meshes with different mechanical properties were considered: an isotropic heavy-weight mesh (Surgipro®), a slightly anisotropic light-weight mesh (Optilene®), and a highly anisotropic medium-weight mesh (Infinit®). Our findings confirm that anisotropic implants need to be positioned such that the most compliant axis of the mesh coincides with the craneo-caudal direction of the body.
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