Trunk muscle strength assessment as a predictor of complications in patients undergoing incisional hernia repair
P. Bravo-Ratón, J. C. Santos-Sánchez, J. L. Gil-Delgado, A. Sánchez-Arteaga, J. Tinoco-González, B. Sañudo Corrales, L. Tallón-Aguilar

TL;DR
This study shows that measuring trunk muscle strength before hernia surgery can predict postoperative complications, suggesting pre-surgery muscle training could improve outcomes.
Contribution
The study introduces trunk muscle strength as a novel predictor of postoperative complications in incisional hernia repair.
Findings
32% of patients experienced complications within 30 days post-surgery.
Stronger lateral trunk muscles were linked to lower postoperative bleeding risk.
Anterior trunk strength in men correlated with reduced surgical site infections.
Abstract
Incisional hernia is a common condition with significant complication rates. While various risk factors have been studied, the role of preoperative trunk muscle strength in predicting postoperative outcomes remains underexplored. This is a prospective cohort study conducted with 75 patients undergoing incisional hernia repair between 1st June 2022 to 31st September 2024. Preoperative trunk muscle strength was assessed by using a strain gauge device, targeting both medial and lateral abdominal muscle groups, and recording force peak (FP) and rate force development (RFD). Patients were followed for 30 days postoperatively, and complications were classified using the Clavien-Dindo classification. Associations between muscle strength and postoperative outcomes, anthropometric variables and comorbidities were analyzed. Mean age was 57.6 years and mean BMI 29.19 kg/m2. Complications were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHernia repair and management · Sports injuries and prevention · Nutrition and Health in Aging
