Abstract

Omphalocele is a congenital abdominal wall defect with an incidence of 1/4,200 births. Repair timing varies from the neonatal period to the first few years of life. Surgical technique has changed over the last two decades. We sought to establish improved surgical/ventilation protocols for patients with omphaloceles requiring abdominal reconstruction. An IRB-approved retrospective review was performed on patients with omphalocele requiring abdominal wall reconstruction by Plastics and/or Pediatric Surgery at a pediatric tertiary-care referral center (January 2006-July 2021). Birth history, comorbidities, surgical details, ventilation data, complications/recurrence were extracted. Of 129 patients screened, seven required Plastic Surgery involvement. Defect size was 102.9 cm2 (range: 24-178.5); five patients required component separation; zero patients received mesh; zero complications/recurrences were recorded. Two patients required postoperative ventilation for 2.5days, based on increased peak inspiratory pressures at surgery stop versus start time. Patients with large defects secondary to omphalocele benefit from collaboration between Pediatric and Plastic Surgery for component separation and primary fascial closure without mesh. Future research should follow patients who mature out of pediatric clinics to evaluate the incidence of hernias in adults with Plastic Surgery-repaired omphaloceles.

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