The sagitta in 3D reconstruction of linea alba on routine CT scans is predictive of postoperative burst abdomen
Matthias Mehdorn, Benedikt Schnarkowski, Sigmar Stelzner, Uwe Scheuermann, Woubet Tefera Kassahun, Timm Denecke, Stefan Niebisch, Hans-Jonas Meyer

TL;DR
This study shows that a longer sagitta in 3D CT scans of the linea alba predicts the risk of postoperative burst abdomen.
Contribution
The study introduces the use of CT-derived 3D reconstruction of the linea alba's sagitta as a novel predictor for burst abdomen after surgery.
Findings
BA patients had a significantly wider linea alba and longer sagitta compared to controls.
The length of the sagitta was significantly associated with the risk of BA in multivariate analysis.
Abstract
Burst abdomen (BA) is a relevant complication after abdominal surgery that causes additional surgical procedures, prolonged hospital stays and long-term morbidity. Several underlying risk factors exist and have been characterized previously. Those risk factors consist of surgical and medical factors. Recently, CT-derived body composition is of rising interest and 3D reconstruction of the linea alba has been studied. The clinical significance of those parameters is not clear. We therefore performed an analysis of linea alba 3D reconstruction measurements and their prognostic significance on the development of BA. An institutional data base of patients with post operative wound infections was assembled. The subgroup of patients with BA was compared to controls. If the patients had complete preoperative abdominal CT scans, their images were further analyzed and 3D reconstruction of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAbdominal Surgery and Complications · Hernia repair and management · Appendicitis Diagnosis and Management
