A review of ventral hernia biomechanics
Victoria Joppin (LBA UMR T24, CRMBM), Catherine Masson (LBA UMR T24), David Bendahan (CRMBM), Thierry Bege (LBA UMR T24)

TL;DR
This review explores how biomechanics can enhance understanding and treatment of ventral hernias by analyzing tissue behavior, surgical techniques, and imaging methods to improve surgical outcomes.
Contribution
It introduces biomechanical assessment as a tool for personalized surgical strategies and discusses experimental and computational methods for tissue characterization.
Findings
Hernias are mechanical failures at weak points of the abdominal wall.
Biomechanical properties influence hernia formation and repair outcomes.
Functional imaging could provide objective biomechanical insights.
Abstract
Despite advancements in surgical techniques, hernia recurrence rates remain high, underscoring the need for improved understanding of abdominal wall behaviour. While surgeons are aware of many factors contributing to hernia occurrence (e.g obesity, smoking, surgical technique or site infection), it would be of interest to consider it as a biomechanical pathology. Indeed, an abdominal hernia arises from an imbalance between abdominal wall deformability and applied forces. This review article discusses how biomechanics offer a quantitative framework for assessing healthy and damaged tissue behaviour, guiding personalised surgical strategies throughout the pre-, intra-, and post-operative periods. The abdominal wall is a dynamic, load-bearing structure, continuously subjected to intra-abdominal pressure and mechanical stress. Its biomechanical properties, including elasticity and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHernia repair and management · Minimally Invasive Surgical Techniques · Intestinal and Peritoneal Adhesions
