Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
LeBlanc and Booth in 1993 first reported application of intra-peritoneal onlay mesh (IPOM) for ventral and incisional hernia. It is based on the principles of Rives-Stoppa technique of repair of ventral hernia in which a large pre-peritoneal mesh is placed and stipulated even distribution of force throughout the mesh area resulting in stronger repair than onlay mesh technique. Laparoscopic technique was adopted in an effort to reduce wound complications, post-operative pain and early return to work. Since then various methods of laparoscopic repair have been performed and studied in an effort to find out the most suitable, least expensive way to deal with ventral hernias. LVHR is a safe alternative to the open method, with the main advantages being minimal postoperative pain, shorter recovery, and decreased wound and mesh infections. This is a retrospective study in which we evaluated the performance of 10 cases of Laparoscopic TARM (Trans Abdominal Retro rectus Mesh repair) from Oct 2018 to Jul 2019. This study is being conducted to evaluate early outcome and complications of this procedure amongst the initial cases at our institute. We chose midline hernias only, both Primary and Incisional, for feasibility to do TARM procedure in retrorectus space. Patients were evaluated for post-operative outcome in terms of pain, local collection and intestinal obstruction. Pain was experienced in mild-moderate degree in four patients, collection in three and small bowel obstruction in two patients. Early results indicate that TARM can be performed as a cheaper alternative to IPOM mesh repair. Further studies are needed to establish this procedure as the preferred method for treatment of midline hernias.
LeBlanc and Booth in 1993 first reported application of intra-peritoneal onlay mesh (IPOM) for ventral and incisional hernia. It is based on the principles of Rives-Stoppa technique of repair of ventral hernia in which a large pre-peritoneal mesh is placed and stipulated even distribution of force throughout the mesh area resulting in stronger repair than onlay mesh technique. Laparoscopic technique was adopted in an effort to reduce wound complications, post-operative pain and early return to work. Since then various methods of laparoscopic repair have been performed and studied in an effort to find out the most suitable, least expensive way to deal with ventral hernias. LVHR is a safe alternative to the open method, with the main advantages being minimal postoperative pain, shorter recovery, and decreased wound and mesh infections. This is a retrospective study in which we evaluated the performance of 10 cases of Laparoscopic TARM (Trans Abdominal Retro rectus Mesh repair) from Oct 2018 to Jul 2019. This study is being conducted to evaluate early outcome and complications of this procedure amongst the initial cases at our institute. We chose midline hernias only, both Primary and Incisional, for feasibility to do TARM procedure in retrorectus space. Patients were evaluated for post-operative outcome in terms of pain, local collection and intestinal obstruction. Pain was experienced in mild-moderate degree in four patients, collection in three and small bowel obstruction in two patients. Early results indicate that TARM can be performed as a cheaper alternative to IPOM mesh repair. Further studies are needed to establish this procedure as the preferred method for treatment of midline hernias.
New therapeutic modalities for Ethmoidal Adenocarcinomas are presented. Thirty three patients harbouring such a tumour have been treated during the last four years. Twenty three were included in the following protocol:--the first step consisted in inductive chemotherapy based on a four-day course of continuous cisplatine (CDDP) and 5-fluoro-uracyl (5-FU infusion)--the second step was the tumour removal, which was performed through a combined transfacial and subfrontal approach. A contralateral ethmoidectomy was always performed. The integrity of the sphenoidal sinus was systematically checked. The cranial base was reconstructed with madreporic coral grafts; then a large extra-dural pediculated galea flap was placed onto the anterior base to line the sub-frontal dura. The authors discuss the results of this series of rare tumours.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.