Abstract

Background:Abdominal rectus diastasis can lead to functional disability. There is no consensus regarding treatment. This was a prospective study on patients randomized to surgery using either Quill self-retaining sutures or retromuscular mesh for abdominal rectus diastasis repair. The primary aim of the study was to compare long-term recurrence after surgery. Secondary aims were abdominal muscle strength, pain, and quality of life.Methods:A total of 57 patients were eligible and 52 were investigated. A routine 1-year follow-up ruled out any patient with recurrence and this was followed up by clinical examination for recurrence and assessment of the secondary outcomes a median of 5 years (3.8–6.5 years) after surgery. Quality of life was assessed using the Short Form-36 questionnaire. Pain related to activity was evaluated using the Ventral Hernia Pain Questionnaire.Results:No recurrence of abdominal rectus diastasis was found. Significant improvements were seen between index surgery and long-term follow-up in all domains of Short Form-36. There were no significant differences in quality of life or self-reported muscle strength between the two surgical groups. Long-term pain remained unchanged compared to that at the 1-year follow-up. “Pain this week” had decreased significantly at long-term follow-up compared to prior to surgery (mesh p = 0.009, Quill p = 0.003).Conclusions:No recurrence of abdominal rectus diastasis appeared. There was no difference in quality of life or long-term pain between the two surgical groups. Implantation of retromuscular mesh entails more extensive surgery implying potentially higher risk for complications. This leads us to recommend reconstruction with double-row self-retaining sutures for the repair of abdominal rectus diastasis in patients with functional disability.

Highlights

  • Abdominal rectus diastasis (ARD) can be either a primary or a secondary condition following pregnancy, massive weight loss, or previous abdominal surgery

  • One early recurrence in the Quill group was repaired with retromuscular mesh within 6 weeks after index surgery

  • Except for the early recurrence before the 3-month follow-up, no ARD recurrence was found in either group between the 1-year and long-term follow-up

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Summary

Introduction

Abdominal rectus diastasis (ARD) can be either a primary or a secondary condition following pregnancy, massive weight loss, or previous abdominal surgery. This was a prospective study on patients randomized to surgery using either Quill self-retaining sutures or retromuscular mesh for abdominal rectus diastasis repair. Secondary aims were abdominal muscle strength, pain, and quality of life. There were no significant differences in quality of life or self-reported muscle strength between the two surgical groups. There was no difference in quality of life or long-term pain between the two surgical groups. Implantation of retromuscular mesh entails more extensive surgery implying potentially higher risk for complications This leads us to recommend reconstruction with double-row self-retaining sutures for the repair of abdominal rectus diastasis in patients with functional disability

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