Towards a better understanding of abdominal wall biomechanics: in vivo relationship between dynamic intra-abdominal pressure and magnetic resonance imaging measurements
Victoria Joppin (LBA UMR T24, CRMBM), Arthur Jourdan (LBA UMR T24), David Bendahan (CRMBM), Andr\'ea Soucasse (LBA UMR T24), Maxime Guye (CRMBM, TIMONE), Catherine Masson (LBA UMR T24), Thierry B\`ege (LBA UMR T24)

TL;DR
This study investigates the in vivo relationship between intra-abdominal pressure and abdominal wall movement using MRI and pressure sensors, revealing participant-specific behaviors crucial for personalized hernia treatment and surgical planning.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of how intra-abdominal pressure correlates with abdominal wall displacement during different exercises, highlighting the importance of personalized assessments.
Findings
Strong correlation between rectus abdominis displacement and pressure during breathing
Lateral muscle displacement correlates with pressure during coughing and Valsalva
Participant-specific variability in abdominal compliance during muscular contraction
Abstract
Background In vivo mechanical behaviour of the abdominal wall has been poorly characterised and important details are missing regarding the occurrence and post-operative recurrence rate of hernias which can be as high as 30 %. This study aimed to assess the correlation between abdominal wall displacement and intra-abdominal pressure, as well as abdominal compliance. Methods Eighteen healthy participants performed audio-guided passive (breathing) and active (coughing, Valsalva maneuver) exercises. Axial dynamic changes of abdominal muscles and visceral area were measured using MRI, and intra-abdominal pressure with ingested pressure sensor. Findings Correlations between abdominal wall displacement and intra-abdominal pressure were specific to participant, exercise, and varying between rectus abdominis and lateral muscles. Strong correlations were found between rectus abdominis…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAbdominal Surgery and Complications · Hernia repair and management · Appendicitis Diagnosis and Management
