Abstract

PurposeAfter closure of laparotomies, sutures may pull through tissue due to too high intra-abdominal pressure or suture tension, resulting in burst abdomen and incisional hernia. The objective of this study was to measure the suture tension in small and large bites with a new suture material.MethodsClosure of the linea alba was performed with small bites (i.e., 5 mm between two consecutive stitches and 5 mm distance from the incision) and large bites (i.e., 10 mm × 10 mm) with Duramesh™ size 0 (2 mm) and PDS II 2-0 in 24 experiments on six porcine abdominal walls. The abdominal wall was fixated on an artificial computer-controlled insufflatable abdomen, known as the ‘AbdoMan’. A custom-made suture tension sensor was placed in the middle of the incision.ResultsThe suture tension was significantly lower with the small bites technique and Duramesh™ when compared with large bites (small bites 0.12 N (IQR 0.07–0.19) vs. large bites 0.57 N (IQR 0.23–0.92), p  < 0.025). This significant difference was also found in favour of the small bites with PDS II 2-0 (p  < 0.038). No macroscopic tissue failure was seen during or after the experiments. ConclusionClosure of the abdominal wall with the small bites technique and Duramesh™ was more efficient in dividing suture tension across the incision when compared to large bites. However, suture tension compared to a conventional suture material was not significantly different, contradicting an advantage of the new suture material in the prevention of burst abdomen and incisional hernia during the acute, postoperative phase.

Highlights

  • Abdominal wound dehiscence has an incidence of up to 4% and it is a feared early complication after abdominal surgery with sequelae like evisceration, prolonged hospitalization and high mortality rates [1]

  • Incisional hernia is a common complication after midline incisions with a 5–30% incidence and may result in pain, reduced quality of life and high healthcare costs [2,3,4]

  • Median suture tension was calculated for one point in time; i.e., at 25 min from the start of insufflation, when the suture tension had reached a plateau in all experiments

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Summary

Introduction

Abdominal wound dehiscence (burst abdomen, ‘Platzbauch’) has an incidence of up to 4% and it is a feared early complication after abdominal surgery with sequelae like evisceration, prolonged hospitalization and high mortality rates [1]. Incisional hernia is a common complication after midline incisions with a 5–30% incidence and may result in pain, reduced quality of life and high healthcare costs [2,3,4]. Hernia (2020) 24:1317–1324 laparotomy [6] This randomized controlled trial showed that the occurrence of an incisional hernia still persists in 13% after a 1-year follow-up [6]. This result confirms that the exact biomechanical basis underlying the superiority of the small bites technique remains unknown

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