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Mechanics of soft tissue reactions to textile mesh implants

  • For pelvic floor disorders that cannot be treated with non-surgical procedures, minimally invasive surgery has become a more frequent and safer repair procedure. More than 20 million prosthetic meshes are implanted each year worldwide. The simple selection of a single synthetic mesh construction for any level and type of pelvic floor dysfunctions without adopting the design to specific requirements increase the risks for mesh related complications. Adverse events are closely related to chronic foreign body reaction, with enhanced formation of scar tissue around the surgical meshes, manifested as pain, mesh erosion in adjacent structures (with organ tissue cut), mesh shrinkage, mesh rejection and eventually recurrence. Such events, especially scar formation depend on effective porosity of the mesh, which decreases discontinuously at a critical stretch when pore areas decrease making the surgical reconstruction ineffective that further augments the re-operation costs. The extent of fibrotic reaction is increased with higher amount of foreign body material, larger surface, small pore size or with inadequate textile elasticity. Standardized studies of different meshes are essential to evaluate influencing factors for the failure and success of the reconstruction. Measurements of elasticity and tensile strength have to consider the mesh anisotropy as result of the textile structure. An appropriate mesh then should show some integration with limited scar reaction and preserved pores that are filled with local fat tissue. This chapter reviews various tissue reactions to different monofilament mesh implants that are used for incontinence and hernia repairs and study their mechanical behavior. This helps to predict the functional and biological outcomes after tissue reinforcement with meshes and permits further optimization of the meshes for the specific indications to improve the success of the surgical treatment.

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Metadaten
Author:Aroj BhattaraiORCiD, Manfred StaatORCiD
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-7904-7_11
ISBN:978-981-10-7904-7
Parent Title (English):Biological, Physical and Technical Basics of Cell Engineering
Publisher:Springer
Place of publication:Singapore
Editor:Gerhard Artmann, Aysegül Temiz Artmann, Azhar A. Zhubanova, Ilya Digel
Document Type:Part of a Book
Language:English
Year of Completion:2018
Date of the Publication (Server):2018/04/26
First Page:251
Last Page:275
Link:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-7904-7_11
Zugriffsart:campus
Institutes:FH Aachen / Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik
FH Aachen / IfB - Institut für Bioengineering
collections:Verlag / Springer