Advances in surgical intensive care have improved survival in patients with major traumatic or infectious intra-abdominal insults. Patients who recover are often left with massive abdominal wall defects. Sufficient autogenous tissue may not be available for reconstruction and synthetic mesh followed by skin grafting can lead to unaesthetic results or complications. We report on four patients with abdominal wall defects and their reconstruction after intra-abdominal injury. Treatment involved local wound care to stimulate granulation tissue, which is eventually skin grafted to close the wound. Patients are then allowed to make a full recovery. Soft-tissue expanding prostheses are placed during a second operation and inflated over subsequent ...
Thankfully managing the patient with a large abdominal wall defect is a rare scenario for most surge...
AbstractWe present a case report concerning the management of a large abdominal wall defect using, S...
BACKGROUND: Repair of abdominal wall defects in the presence of contamination or infection continues...
Advances in surgical intensive care have improved survival in patients with major traumatic or infec...
Aim. Abdominal wound dehiscence is common, usually resulting from laparotomies associated with conta...
Large abdominal cutaneous defects may occur in association with complex ventral hernias, trauma, tum...
Reconstruction of a large abdominal defect is a technically demanding procedure. A single flap is so...
Emergency full thickness abdominal wall defects constitute a challenging problem for surgeons. The a...
Complex abdominal wall defects may result from trauma, extensive infections or resection of primary ...
Background: The anterior abdominal wall is an important complex composite structure that poses a cha...
Reconstruction of open abdominal defects is a clinical problem which general and plastic surgeons ha...
The risk factors for abdominal wall hernia after surgery are an increase in body mass index, midline...
Incisional hernia is by far the most common complication after laparotomies, occurring in 10 – 20%. ...
Copyright © 2014 Fabio Caviggioli et al.This is an open access article distributed under theCreative...
INTRODUCTION: Patients with abdominal wall defects present challenging complications that require th...
Thankfully managing the patient with a large abdominal wall defect is a rare scenario for most surge...
AbstractWe present a case report concerning the management of a large abdominal wall defect using, S...
BACKGROUND: Repair of abdominal wall defects in the presence of contamination or infection continues...
Advances in surgical intensive care have improved survival in patients with major traumatic or infec...
Aim. Abdominal wound dehiscence is common, usually resulting from laparotomies associated with conta...
Large abdominal cutaneous defects may occur in association with complex ventral hernias, trauma, tum...
Reconstruction of a large abdominal defect is a technically demanding procedure. A single flap is so...
Emergency full thickness abdominal wall defects constitute a challenging problem for surgeons. The a...
Complex abdominal wall defects may result from trauma, extensive infections or resection of primary ...
Background: The anterior abdominal wall is an important complex composite structure that poses a cha...
Reconstruction of open abdominal defects is a clinical problem which general and plastic surgeons ha...
The risk factors for abdominal wall hernia after surgery are an increase in body mass index, midline...
Incisional hernia is by far the most common complication after laparotomies, occurring in 10 – 20%. ...
Copyright © 2014 Fabio Caviggioli et al.This is an open access article distributed under theCreative...
INTRODUCTION: Patients with abdominal wall defects present challenging complications that require th...
Thankfully managing the patient with a large abdominal wall defect is a rare scenario for most surge...
AbstractWe present a case report concerning the management of a large abdominal wall defect using, S...
BACKGROUND: Repair of abdominal wall defects in the presence of contamination or infection continues...