Daily Mail

Is it safe to use mesh to repair my hernia?

- DR MARTIN SCURR

QI AM due to have an NHS operation on a hernia to the right of my groin. The surgeon has told me that mesh will be used to hold it in place and that this has a good track record and is the most widely-used method to treat hernias in the health service.

I am trying to find out if this is the same mesh used in operations for women with incontinen­ce that is causing them so much misery, as described in the Good Health pages of the Daily Mail.

I would appreciate your views on the mesh used in hernia operations.

C. M. Watson, Aldeburgh, Suffolk.

AHERNIA repair is one of the most common operations performed by the NHS. a hernia — protrusion of an internal structure or organ through its coverings — can occur in many parts of the body.

For the sake of this discussion, i will restrict my comments to abdominal hernias, which are the most common, with the focus on inguinal hernias, which is the subject of your enquiry.

inguinal hernias, where fatty tissue or part of the bowel pushes through a weak spot in muscles in the groin, like yours, are the most common, accounting for 70 per cent of all cases. The NHS spends £56 million treating this type of hernia each year.

inguinal hernias present as a bulge in the groin area and become more obvious when coughing, straining or lifting.

They can be painful and, left untreated, there is a risk of strangulat­ion, an acute emergency occurring when the contents of the hernia, usually the intestine, twist — meaning its blood supply is cut off, which can lead to gangrene.

Most hernia repairs involve synthetic mesh being inserted through a 10 cm incision in the groin to hold the previously bulging tissue in place.

There is no agreement about the best surgical treatment: in 90 per cent of cases, open, not keyhole, surgery is used, but, whichever technique is used, the hernia recurs in 10 per cent of cases.

Studies show that surgery using a mesh patch to repair the bulge (the most common option) has better results than nonmesh repairs — patients return faster to normal activities and have lower rates of persistent pain and recurrence.

if mesh is not used, the tissues are simply stitched together.

neither method is perfect, hence the disagreeme­nt and controvers­y about which works best.

Mesh, positioned to allow healing once fibrous tissue forms over it, gives good strength to the repair.

The technique usually takes 30 to 45 minutes, is carried out under local anaestheti­c and has been perfected over many years, with tens of thousands of operations. recovery is rapid and the outcome is reliable.

The incidence of post-operative complicati­ons is low, but there have been reports of patients feeling pain after hernia surgery using mesh, which was only relieved when it was removed.

i have discussed this with David nott, an eminent general surgeon in London, who has carried out operations to remove mesh after unsuccessf­ul hernia operations (performed elsewhere) in perhaps 20 patients over several years.

in these patients, the body seems to react to the synthetic mesh. Why it reacts in this way to an inert material is uncertain.

i liken it to contact lenses: while most people rapidly tolerate them, some are never able to adapt.

Mesh for hernia repair surgery may be the same or similar to that which has caused such concern in the treatment of women with prolapse or continence problems.

But i am not sure a comparison can be made between procedures using mesh for gynaecolog­ical complaints in women and mesh repair for inguinal hernias.

The point must also be made that inguinal hernia repair using non-mesh techniques also has, along with a recurrence rate, a small incidence of continuing post- operative pain. i must reassure you that by far the greater probabilit­y is that you will have a good outcome. indeed, facing the same problem, i had a repair to a double hernia using mesh with full confidence.

QI’VE been told I have Baker’s cysts in my knees, which are making the backs of my legs quite painful, and that physiother­apy is the answer.

But it’s not working well — is there an alternativ­e? Ron Davis, Bath.

AA BAKER’S cyst, technicall­y known as a popliteal cyst, is a swelling at the back of the knee and a common occurrence. They tend to occur in people between the ages of 35 and 70 and are a sign of a problem in the knee joint — typically osteoarthr­itis or damaged cartilage.

Baker’s cysts are not usually painful, however some patients experience discomfort behind the knee or knee stiffness, particular­ly with prolonged standing, and this may worsen with activity.

The swelling is a pouch of fluid — known as a bursa — which may change in size and tension as the knee joint moves.

it’s important to remember that the cysts are manifestat­ions of whatever the problem is within the knee joint itself.

Cysts that are not causing any symptoms do not require further action, though finding out the cause through further examinatio­ns of the knee joint itself via X-rays or Mri scans should be considered.

Painful cysts can be aspirated — using a needle to withdraw the fluid — and, at the same time, a steroid known as a glucocorti­coid can be injected into the joint, which will decrease the size of the cyst, as well as reduce discomfort and the likelihood of recurrence.

Treatment may fail if the accumulati­on of fluid in the knee, and, therefore, the cyst, is caused by a torn meniscus (the disc of cartilage in the knee) or significan­t arthritis, because as long as there is an internal problem — often known as an ‘internal derangemen­t’ — the knee will go on protesting by pumping out fluid, which will accumulate. in that case, the next steps will be decided by your orthopaedi­c specialist.

in response to your specific question about physiother­apy, it will not ‘treat’ the cyst, but will have been prescribed to strengthen the leg muscles, to improve the support and function of the knee joint, as muscle wasting may well have occurred if the primary diagnosis is osteoarthr­itis of the knee joint or cartilage damage from a previous injury.

i’m sure your physiother­apist will have been briefed and will be able to enlighten you about what has triggered the cysts to form.

WRITE TO DR SCURR

WRITE to Dr Scurr at Good Health, Daily Mail, 2 Derry Street, London W8 5TT or email drmartin@dailymail.co.uk — include your contact details. Dr Scurr cannot enter into personal correspond­ence. Replies should be taken in a general context and always consult your own GP with any health worries.

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