Carmarthen Journal

DAI: IMPLANTS COST ME YEARS

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WALES’S World Champion hurdler Dai Greene has revealed he was forced to sit out an entire Olympic cycle after suffering serious complicati­ons from mesh implants used to repair a minor hernia.

Greene, who captained the Great Britain athletics team at the 2012 London Olympics, lost five years of his career after the surgery, which he was told would allow him to return to the track within weeks.

“The golden thing I got sold was that after three weeks you’ll be back running and after six weeks you’ll be completely fine,” said the Llanellibo­rn Swansea Harrier.

“It got advertised to me as foolproof… stronger than anything else you could have.”

After the surgery in 2013, Greene suffered acute pain.

A series of operations to put things right revealed the mesh had become frayed and entangled with nerves in his pelvis.

Up to 100,000 hernia mesh operations are carried out in England each year, and the medical regulator has recorded 222 reports of “adverse events” linked to the process over the past decade.

But clinical registries and health data in other countries point to some products having higher complicati­on rates, suggesting problems may have been under-reported in the UK.

Greene, 32, had the surgery in spring 2013 to correct a small hernia in the inguinal muscles around the pelvis.

He does not recall being told of any potential risks, but said his surgeon told him of a previous patient, a profession­al weightlift­er, who missed his follow-up appointmen­t after surgery because he was competing in the Olympics.

“Obviously something like that instills a lot of confidence,” Greene said.

After seemingly making a quick recovery from the surgery, on returning to training he immediatel­y began suffering significan­t pelvic pain. “Surgery alone shouldn’t cause this much discomfort,” he said.

By the autumn, Greene’s doctor concluded the original hernia was still present and the athlete had a second operation, which did not help.

Still unable to train, he underwent two mesh removal surgeries in Germany in 2014 and 2015 (on one side and then the other), which finally relieved the pain.

His surgeon found the mesh had frayed and become entangled with the nerves, which had to be snipped.

“That’s why anytime I was moving I was in loads of pain, because there was something just constantly pressing on my nerve,” he told the Guardian newspaper.

Complicati­ons from the multiple surgeries and time off training meant Greene also missed the 2016 and 2017 seasons, and lost lucrative sponsorshi­p deals.

“To have that much time off in your career, of no running, is just crazy,” he said.

“From being one of the best in the world year after year to just falling off the radar entirely… It’s a massive frustratio­n.

“I’ve only got a finite amount of time to do what I want to do in my career.

“I try not to think too much about [what happened] because then I’ll get bitter.”

Greene’s experience echoes those of other patients who have had problems with hernia mesh. The US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) cites pain, infection and hernia recurrence as the most frequent complicati­ons.

Pharmaceut­ical company Johnson & Johnson recalled one of its leading mesh implants in 2016 after German and Dutch registries showed it had a particular­ly high failure rate, five years after the implant was brought to market with no clinical trial.

The company is facing class action lawsuits in Canada, Australia and the US.

In a statement, Johnson & Johnson said of its product, called Physiomesh: “Based on the available data, we believe the higher rates to be the result of multiple factors, including possible product characteri­stics, operative, and patient factors.”

The company added: “Our highest priority is the safety of those who use our products.”

Last summer Greene won gold at the British Athletics Championsh­ips and captained the GB team at the European Championsh­ips.

But the experience has shaken his confidence and he advises other athletes to be cautious.

“If you are going to see a surgeon there is only one response that they’re going to give you: that they can fix you with surgery,” he said. “It doesn’t mean it’s the right thing to do and it doesn’t mean that they can.”

He also has concerns about a lack of informatio­n available to patients regarding the pros and cons of surgery and implants.

“In sport we always like to deal in numbers,” he said, adding that it ought to be possible to provide basic success rates and the numbers of people who report pain or other setbacks after a procedure.

“It’s simply asking questions of people who’ve had surgery,” he said.

“I feel like there’s nothing out there that’s that easy to get hold of for us. We just take whatever informatio­n the doctor is telling us or selling us as fact.”

 ??  ?? Dai Greene celebrates winning the 400 metres hurdles final at the British Athletics Championsh­ips this year.
Dai Greene celebrates winning the 400 metres hurdles final at the British Athletics Championsh­ips this year.

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