This talk was presented at the 2018 SAGES Meeting/16th World Congress of Endoscopic Surgery by David W Rattner during the Devil’s in the Details: Paraesophageal Hernia Repair on April 11 2018
Keyword(s): abdomen, absorbable mesh, academic medical centers, aging population, anatomic, aorta, biologic mesh, bleeding, BMI, body mass index, buttress, caudate lobe, coated mesh, Collis gastroplasty, cruroplasty, crus, debate, Devils in the Details: Paraesophageal Hernia Repair, elderly, endoscopy, esophagus, failed primary cruroplasty, fellow, follow-up, gastroesophageal junction, gastropexy, GEJ, glue, greater curvature, hernia sac, HHR, hiatal hernia, hiatal hernia repair, hook cautery, IAP, incidence, intra abdominal pressure, keyhole mesh, lap Nissen, laparoscopic Nissen fundoplication, Level I evidence, liver, mediastinus, mesh crural reinforcement, mesh cruroplasty, mesh erosion, mesh fixation, meta-analysis, midline, open surgery, pain, paraesophageal hernia, paraesophageal hernia repair, patch, PEHR, pericardium, permanent mesh, pledgetted suture, plication, Prolene mesh, radiographic, randomized trial, recurrence, recurrence rate, redo surgery, reflux symptoms, relaxing incision, resident, reviewer, round hiatus, SC junction, sepsis, squamocolumnar junction, stitch, stomach, suture, sutures, symptomatic, symptomatic paraesophageal hernia, symptomatic PEHR, tacks, tension, tension-free, trauma, vena cava
Options–7:18
The problem with posterior buttress–10:07
Keyhole mesh–10:50