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Long Term Mesh Questions – Surgeons/ALL
Dr. Towfigh/Surgeons/and All on this forum who may know the answers,
I’ve posted here a few times and I’m trying to do all the research I can prior to making a decision to move forward with surgery on my inguinal hernia. As I’ve seen in my research, 99% of surgeons use mesh. The products are usually different from surgeon to surgeon, as well as the technique. I’ve also read tons of posts here confirming this detail, so I won’t dwell. Yet, as I’ve continued down this rabbit hole that negatively consumes mesh on the web (and there are factual claims that back up these stories), I’ve become more and more anxious, nervous, and frankly scared to get surgery unless it’s not with mesh. I could use some reassurance.
My questions consist of the following and are specifically in regard to years after inguinal hernia operation (10, 15, and even greater than 30 years later).
1) What are the statistics on mesh degrading over time? I’m young (33) and pretty worried that if I get a perminant mesh implant, it will eventually degrade and cause an infection/auto-immune disorder, chronic pain, or something worse that will require removal. Surgeons: Is there any data from studies that can prove this hypthesis wrong? Will this eventually happen over time to everyone with a mesh implant?
2) I’ve read that following mesh implementation in inguinal surgery, the nerves in the groin (even if uneffected with surgeon placement, both lapro and open) will eventually either grow into the mesh, or grow into the adhesions from the scar tissue, which will cause nerve entrapment and lead to significant/debilitating pain. Surgeons: Is there data proving that this will not eventually occur for all mesh implants?
3) I was dumb and decided to browse the adverse events report on the FDA website. There are a ton of reports relating to the two scenerios I’ve laid out above (thousands). I know there are roughly 700-800 thousand of these procedures done per year in the US, so even a 5% complication rate is still a large number. Surgeons: can any of you provide clear statistics on the people that have complications like this following mesh repair and the likelihood of it happening to a healthy, young adult?
4) My last general question is simple: what are the odds of having ANY issues with mesh in the time periods I’ve noted above (up to 30 years later)?
Thanks for reading and I hope we can get some solid responses for the users on this forum.
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