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One month since mesh removal
Hi all,
Many of you already know my story – essentially mild to moderate discomfort for 3 years after right-sided robotic mesh inguinal hernia repair for an indirect hernia, using progrip mesh. On and off soreness/stiffness/tightness, with a variety of other issues here and there that caused discomfort. I have wanted mesh removal for a long time but was tortured because I couldn’t decide what to do given that I wasn’t terribly disabled or in severe pain.
I finally had the mesh removed robotically by Dr. Belyanksy on 2/15. I finally realized I wasn’t going to be happy until I did this because I wasn’t happy with the outcome from the initial hernia surgery. While I wasn’t in dire straits, I was uncomfortable most of the time.
The surgery went well. He removed 100% of the mesh. There was no hernia present upon removal, and I received no other repair. He said there was a slight fold in the middle of the mesh that may have created some of my issues. He didn’t see anything else particularly interesting otherwise, except that the mesh was ‘riding up’ a little higher than normal in one area. But this ended up being a good thing as it meant the mesh was a little further from one of the critical nerves. No nerves had to be cut, either, during the surgery.
Things have been going pretty well. The first week was rough as I just felt very swollen and uncomfortable after another robotic abdominal surgery. Shockingly little groin pain if any at all at first. I actually had, and still have, some mild to moderate nerve pain in my abdomen in the fatty area in the center of my stomach from the skin surface down to the muscle. He thinks over time this will fade. Related, I also have a tight feeling in the same area and the umbilical area in particular, and I think it’s related to the overly sensitive nerves. If water runs down my stomach in the shower, for example, it seems to trigger that tight feeling and skin sensitivity.
I was originally very worried about an incisional hernia in the umbilical area and where the trocar incisions were, particularly on the right side where the opening had to be more dilated to get the mesh out. He had to use in internal dissolvable stitch to close it (typical), and with every slight movement I felt a strong pulling sensation. Fortunately, that’s mostly all gone now, and I can even sleep on both my sides and my stomach now fairly comfortably. I had a follow-up just last week with the surgeon, and he said there didn’t appear to be any recurrence or any issues around the trocar sites, and that it will just take some time for things to settle down.
I still have some vague soreness and occasional tightness in the groin and lower abdominal area like before, but it’s a little different now. It doesn’t seem quite as stiff when I get up from a sitting position. I am hoping that over time it gets better. But I also know that I had a similar soreness before the original hernia surgery as well. I understand there’s a chance that will always be with me now. And I don’t know that my right side will ever be quite the same after two big abdominal surgeries. I think my body is just super sensitive and I tend to feel every little thing, particularly when I focus attention on it. Perhaps after another year or two or three I will mostly stop thinking about it. It’s only a month now, and my surgeon suggested it will take time, and to give it several months and see how things go. It will be interesting to see how things heal up in the absence of the mesh, and if scar tissue remodels over time and becomes more and more ‘normal’ feeling.
I am very happy that I don’t currently have any major pain. I was terrified that I might be worse off somehow immediately after surgery. No bathroom or sexual issues, though I do feel a little like my BMs aren’t as loose as before. I’ve continued to take stool softeners and prune juice because I am scared of pushing too hard now that I don’t have mesh. And I am relieved, psychologically, that the mesh is out, and that any future pains and issues I have can’t be attributed directly to the mesh.
I am hoping in several months that the tightness and nerve issues will settle and my abdomen will feel a bit more normal. While the swelling seems to have gotten better, it still feels a little puffy. I believe now that some of my issues, particularly those higher up on my right side, were probably directly related to the robotic abdominal surgery itself, which I think is quite a bit more traumatic than advertised. This opinion may change as time goes on depending upon how I heal up.
He basically said he wouldn’t put any restrictions on me now, and I can start exercising again when I feel like it. I may actually go for a very short jog today to see how that feels. But he did say that running is rough on the body and I may want to consider something else like biking, swimming, etc, going forward. He even suggested some of my issues might have started after I took up running, which I did shortly before all this happened. I am of course still super nervous about getting another hernia now that I don’t have the mesh, but he suggested that a smaller indirect hernia tends to close up pretty well with the scar tissue the mesh creates, and even after removal could hold well. If I do get another hernia, I can get an open tissue repair on that side. The other side still remains hernia-free.
I’ll keep you all posted as time goes by. I know that new issues can occasionally crop up months after this kind of surgery, but that things can continue to also improve for a very long-time as well.
By the way, Dr. Belyansky is no longer really doing mesh removals. He’s trying to refocus his time on his primary passion – complex abdominal wall repair. I don’t believe he’s taking new patients any longer for this type of surgery.
Feel free to ask any questions you might have.
Thanks
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