Abstract

Abstract Aim FLH present a surgical challenge due to their anatomic location, proximity to boney structures, and lack of elasticity of the surrounding muscle. With less than 1,000 cases reported, there is no uniform operative management. This is the largest study to date evaluating FLH repair (FLHR). Materials & Methods A prospective, single-center, hernia specific database was queried for patients who underwent open flank or lumbar hernia repair from 2004–2021. Demographics, operative characteristics, and outcomes were evaluated. Standard statistical methods were used. Results 145 patients included 109 flank hernias and 36 lumbar hernias. The hernias resulted from prior surgery (73.3%), blunt trauma (19.7%), or primary defects (7.0%). The mean defect size was 125.7±166.8cm2, 46.9% were recurrent, and 11.0% of patients visited a pain specialist preoperatively. Mesh was commonly synthetic (92.4%), a mean of 755.9±373.4 cm2, and placed in the preperitoneal space (92.7%). Component separation technique was utilized in 16.8% of cases and pelvic bone anchor fixation in 13.8%. Preoperative chronic pain was present in 75% of patients receiving bone anchors and only 6.6% postoperatively. Complete defect closure occurred in each case. Wound infection (8.1%) and mesh infection (1.4%) were uncommon. Prolonged, postoperative discomfort was reported in 22%, half of which had chronic pain preoperatively (p<0.01). Hernia recurrence was 3.4% at 29.3±13.2 months follow-up. Recurrences occurred posteriorly in 3 and in 2 mesh infections requiring explantation. Conclusions Open preperitoneal repair of FLHs with synthetic mesh results in low rates of postoperative complications and hernia recurrence. Postoperative pain correlated closely with preoperative pain.

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