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Hernia, Ventral clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01622725 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Primary and Secondary Ventral Hernia

Primary and Secondary Ventral Hernia Repair Using Long-term Resorbable Versus Non-resorbable Large Pore Synthetic Mesh.

TIGR
Start date: February 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Since abdominal wall hernia repair is currently performed with the use of a mesh, side effects associated with the mesh are frequently reported during long term follow-up. These side effects are related to shrinkage of the mesh, adhesions to the bowl, pain, and inflammation of the skin and bowl. To reduce or prevent these effects, a fully resorbing mesh has been developed, which provides sufficient support and strength to allow efficient recovery of the abdominal wall, but also disappear from your body in three years time, so that you no longer have any synthetic material in your body. Previous resorbing meshes also disappeared but over a much shorter period of time, so that the hernia was insufficiently healed, with recurrence as a result. The TIGRâ„¢ mesh (the resorbable mesh used in the study) is in principle a synthetic mesh, made of two commonly used polymers, however it will retain 50% of its initial strength after six months. This in theory is enough to provide support of the collagen healing process during the initial wound-healing phase, but also to support the transition of initial collagen to functional collagen. The aim of this study is to compare TIGRâ„¢ with large pore mesh used in the repair of the anterior abdominal wall repair (incisional hernia, umbilical hernia, etc..Inguinal hernias are not part of the study). Therefore the patients will be divided into two groups, one group will be treated with a resorbing mesh, the other group will be treated with a permanent mesh. Otherwise there will be no difference in the medication or the surgical techniques used.

NCT ID: NCT01413412 Active, not recruiting - Postoperative Pain Clinical Trials

Full-thickness Skin vs. Synthetic Mesh in the Repair of Large Incisional Hernia

Start date: December 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a prospective randomized study to compare surgical methods for the repair of large abdominal hernia.