Dr. Guy Voeller Memphis, TN

Hernia Discussion Forums Hernia Discussion Dr. Guy Voeller Memphis, TN

Viewing 6 reply threads
  • Author
    Posts
    • #10871
      bharlan2001
      Member

      Anyone have an inguinal hernia repair done by Dr. Voeller? Results?

    • #13986
      drtowfigh
      Keymaster

      Dr. Guy Voeller Memphis, TN

      Dr. Voeller is considered to be among the top surgeons with specialty in hernias. He performs open and laparoscopic surgery.

      I would love to hear from patients!

    • #12542
      bharlan2001
      Member

      Dr. Guy Voeller Memphis, TN

      bharlan2001 (Robert Harlan 78 years old) reporting:

      Decided to approach Dr. Voeller first. Good choice. He is a professor at the University of Tennessee Medical School in Memphis, TN. He is a hernia specialist, has done studies on different meshes, has done 4,000 inguinal hernias, is a member of the Minimally Invasive Surgery unit at Baptist Memorial hospital in Memphis. He had all the right answers; polypropylene mesh, mesh anchored with glue, he would be doing the surgery, etc.

      I had lower abdominal, bilateral bulges for decades. Never even considered they were hernias. No pain, no activities restrictions, nothing. He called for an MRI as the right side bulge had enlarged considerably, in a matter of minutes, during a trip to Colorado last summer after a strenuous hike hike. After reviewing the MRI he said the hernias on both sides were “huge”. Surgery was scheduled for Nov. 2 with the plan to begin laparoscopicly(sp?) and switch to open if the first option was not feasible. The surgery was completed laparoscopicly. Recovery was relatively pain free with minimal opioid medication. At the 2 week followup Dr. Voeller upgraded the “huge” hernias to “massive”. Who knew. The last followup will be Dec. 21. All is good. My lower abdomen hasn’t been this flat in decades. Dr. Voeller was the right choice for me. I recommend him with no reservations.

      Happy Holidays,
      Robert

    • #14928
      Good intentions
      Participant
      quote bharlan2001:

      Dr. Guy Voeller Memphis, TN

      bharlan2001 (Robert Harlan 78 years old) reporting:

      Decided to approach Dr. Voeller first. Good choice. He is a professor at the University of Tennessee Medical School in Memphis, TN. He is a hernia specialist, has done studies on different meshes, has done 4,000 inguinal hernias, is a member of the Minimally Invasive Surgery unit at Baptist Memorial hospital in Memphis. He had all the right answers; polypropylene mesh, mesh anchored with glue, he would be doing the surgery, etc.

      Can you give more detail on the material? I’ve seen where a couple of people have had Progrip mesh with good results, where I have Bard Soft Mesh, with poor results. Trying to draw some correlations between good materials and not so good. If they were all the same, some of the manufacturers would go out of business. There must be a reason for choosing one over another.

      Thanks. And how are things now? Six weeks after surgery is barely time to reach a steady state.

    • #14946
      bharlan2001
      Member

      Unfortunately I have no details on the mesh. I don’t know anything about the Progrip mesh.

      My hernia recovery has been uneventful. Everything has healed as it should. I have no restrictions other than what advancing age places on us all. No discomfort since my last post. Don’t know the mesh is there.

      Hope you have a successful and uneventful mesh removal.

      Robert

    • #14949
      iconoclast
      Member

      LOVE to hear that!
      Still hitting the trails hard?

    • #14958
      quote Good intentions:

      Can you give more detail on the material? I’ve seen where a couple of people have had Progrip mesh with good results, where I have Bard Soft Mesh, with poor results. Trying to draw some correlations between good materials and not so good. If they were all the same, some of the manufacturers would go out of business. There must be a reason for choosing one over another.

      Thanks. And how are things now? Six weeks after surgery is barely time to reach a steady state.

      I trained with Dr Voeller and to my knowledge he still uses Covidien (now Metronic) Parietex polyester mesh. He fixates the mesh with Tisseel fibrin glue which resorbs in about two weeks. Progrip is essentially the same mesh only with a different means of fixation (also temporary). It uses hyaluronic acid to create a “self fixating” mesh. Having performed both techniques, I would say post-operative pain is very similar.

Viewing 6 reply threads
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

New Report

Close

Skip to toolbar