1. ROBotic Utility for Surgical Treatment of hernias (ROBUST hernia project)
- Author
-
Femke Nachtergaele, Filip Muysoms, Pieter Pletinckx, Maxime Dewulf, MUMC+: MA Heelkunde (9), and RS: FHML non-thematic output
- Subjects
Laparoscopic surgery ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030230 surgery ,Abdominal wall ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Robotic Surgical Procedures ,medicine ,Humans ,Incisional Hernia ,Hernia ,Surgical treatment ,Herniorrhaphy ,REPAIR ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,Robotic surgery ,Surgical Mesh ,medicine.disease ,Hernia repair ,digestive system diseases ,Hernia, Ventral ,Surgery ,stomatognathic diseases ,Inguinal hernia ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Abdominal wall surgery ,Ventral hernia ,business ,Hospital stay - Abstract
We describe the evolution in hernia repair approaches in our practice during the first 3 years of adopting robotic assisted laparoscopic surgery. For inguinal hernia repair, we began using the robotic platform for complex hernias, and the use of open repair decreased from 17% to 6%. For primary ventral hernias, open procedures decreased from 59% to 10% and for incisional ventral hernias, from 48% to 11%. Moreover, a large shift in mesh position for ventral hernias was seen, with an increase of the retromuscular position from 20% to 82% and a decrease of intraperitoneal mesh position from 48% to 10%.The robotic platform seems to hold a significant potential for complex inguinal hernias, in addition to ventral and incisional hernias which require component separation. A shorter hospital stay and less postoperative complications might make the adoption of the robotic platform for abdominal wall surgery a valuable proposition. (C) 2021 AEC. Published by Elsevier Espana, S.L.U. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF