Laparoscopic ventral hernia repair requires an intraperitoneal prosthetic; however, these materials are not without consequences. We evaluated host reaction to intraperitoneal placement of various prosthetics and the functional outcomes in an animal model. Mesh (n = 15 per mesh type) was implanted on intact peritoneum in New Zealand white rabbits. The mesh types included ePTFE (DualMesh®), ePTFE and polypropylene (Composix®), polypropylene and oxidized regenerated cellulose (Proceed®), and polypropylene (Marlex®). Adhesion formation was evaluated at 1, 4, 8, and 16 weeks using 2-mm mini-laparoscopy. Adhesion area, adhesion tenacity, prosthetic shrinkage, and compliance were evaluated after mesh explantation at 16 weeks. DualMesh® had significantly less adhesions than Proceed®, Composix®, or Marlex® at 1, 4, 8, and 16 weeks (P < 0.0001). Marlex® had significantly more adhesions than other meshes at each time point (P < 0.0001). There were no statistically significant differences in adhesions between Proceed® and Composix® meshes. After mesh explantation, the mean area of adhesions for Proceed® (4.6%) was less than for Marlex® (21.7%; P = 0.001). The adhesions to Marlex® were statistically more tenacious than the DualMesh® and Composix® groups. Overall prosthetic shrinkage was statistically greater for DualMesh® (34.7%) than for the remaining mesh types (P < 0.01). Mesh compliance was similar between the groups. Prosthetic materials demonstrate a wide variety of characteristics when placed inside the abdomen. Marlex® formed more adhesions with greater tenacity than the other mesh types. DualMesh® resulted in minimal adhesions, but it shrank more than the other mesh types. Each prosthetic generates a varied host reaction. Better understanding of these reactions can allow a suitable prosthetic to be chosen for a given patient in clinical practice.
CITATION STYLE
Harrell, A. G., Novitsky, Y. W., Peindl, R. D., Cobb, W. S., Austin, C. E., Cristiano, J. A., … Heniford, B. T. (2006). Prospective evaluation of adhesion formation and shrinkage of intra-abdominal prosthetics in a rabbit model. American Surgeon, 72(9), 808–813. https://doi.org/10.1177/000313480607200908
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