Ground-breaking techniques for closing giant hernias – could this help you? Watch our video!

Patients who have had Giant hernias have previously been told that any operation would prove either very difficult or impossible, until now.

Graham Offer

Graham Offer

Graham Offer, Consultant plastic surgeon at Leicester’s Hospitals, is a leading specialist in Complex abdominal wall reconstruction. His work focusses on cases where a large defect or hole in the abdominal wall occurs which the patient’s bowels then move through and push out under the skin. In some cases where the hole is very large a giant hernia develops. He and his team have been developing techniques to enable the largest of these hernias to be closed.

Hernias often range between 3 and 4cm across. With the new technique, the team can now operate on giant hernias which can develop to be 20 to 30 cm across, meaning they are up to 10 times the regular size.

The new procedure that is used is a form of ‘component separation’. The team combine three techniques, including a TAR Posterior Release with an Anterior Release and also a Rectus Sheath Release. In effect, they split the muscle layers of the abdomen and move them over each other. Imagine a sandwich, with three layers. They split the layers and push them to the sides. So the sandwich covers a larger area of the plate (but is thinner). They have closed 19 patients’ giant hernias so far.


Glenn Williams, 67, from Leicester, is one of Mr Offer’s patients and had one of the largest abdominal hernias that has ever been successfully closed in Leicester and one of the largest ever seen by the team with a c.20cm by 30cm defect. After two years of having the hernia, he met with Kirsten Boyle, Consultant surgeon at Leicester’s Hospitals, who informed him that Mr Offer and the team could operate on his hernia. This took place successfully.

Giant Hernia from Leicester’s Hospitals on Vimeo.

Glenn said: “My life when I had the hernia made me quite depressed, as it got bigger and bigger and I found I could do less and less because the weight of it. It caused me to suffer with back ache, dizzy spells, aches in legs, it was just horrible. People would stare at me where ever I went, and I could hear comments from people saying I have a football up my coat, or I’ve been shop lifting, or when was my baby due. It affected me not only mentally, and physically, but emotionally too.

“When Mrs Boyle told me I could get some form of life back I had a spring in my step. My life became a kind of whirlwind, I had got the best news I’d heard in a long time, meeting Mr Offer and listening to him explain how big the operation would be just didn’t seem to sink in. And still now I’ve had my operation I am still surprised how big it was. I am not totally recovered and that I know will take time, but I can look at myself in the mirror now and not find my reflection repulsive. I now do things more slowly and still suffer with back ache but having a normal body, and people not staring at me when I’m out makes me feel better, and happier. With time I know I’ll get stronger and able to do more and these are the days I look forward to.”

Mr Offer is delighted with the success his team have achieved for patients like Glenn: “A few years ago hernias like Glenn’s would have been inoperable. In looking to operate on bigger and bigger hernias, I brought together the three main hernia surgery techniques used in abdominal wall reconstruction and developed a method to combine them which means that we can now operate on patients who would have otherwise been told that nothing could be done.”

Mr Offer has since been asked to speak at an International Conference in India to present his technique and hopes that it will be of benefit to increasing numbers of patients.

How can diet and exercise help you conceive? Watch our video with Zita West where she gives advice on how diet, nutrition and exercise can play a key role in boosting your fertility


Zita West

Zita West

It’s well known that a good diet and exercise regime is important for a healthy pregnancy and for your baby’s growth. But believe it or not, paying attention to diet and exercise should also be a top priority even before you conceive.

From the very start you’ll be nourishing the egg and sperm cells that will become your baby, so following a sensible diet when you’re ‘trying’ is imperative.  Balancing your blood sugar by eating breakfast, having a diet rich in antioxidants and making sure you have plenty of vitamin D will all help to balance hormone levels and improve your fertility.

For both men and women, being overweight can affect your ability to conceive. So maintaining a healthy level of exercise not only keeps your weight down but helps with endorphin release, reduces stress, regulates your blood sugar levels, and promotes good circulation to the reproductive organs.

Balance is vital when it comes to both diet and exercise as being underweight can harm your fertility and men who do too much exercise could be impairing their sperm count; no one knows more about this than leading fertility and pregnancy expert Zita West who is also a practicing midwife, acupuncturist and nutritional advisor.

If you are trying to conceive or know someone who is, watch our video with Zita West who has teamed up with First Response to give advice on diet, nutrition and exercise fertility boosters.

You can watch the video here

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b92wVJwWXr4

Zita West is – who has been a midwife for 30 years and whose clients have included Kate Winslet, Stella McCartney and Sophie Wessex.


Prostate cancer – join Tamzin Outhwaite and her father talking about his prostate cancer journey.

Log on to our live and interactive WebTV show with Tamzin Outhwaite, where she will discuss how prostate cancer affected her family

 

Tamzin Outhwaite talks about prostate cancer

Tamzin Outhwaite talks about prostate cancer

Show date: Tuesday 11th June 

Show time: 2:45pm

tamzin oProstate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the UK. Despite this, it is a disease which can often strike men ‘out of the blue’ due to a concerning lack of knowledge about the disease.

Tamzin Outhwaite will be joined on the sofa by her father Colin, who was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2009; they are both backing Prostate Cancer UK’s drive to get more people talking about the disease.

Tamzin hopes that her involvement with the charity and her talking about the disease will encourage more people to do so and in turn increase awareness amongst men. Thankfully her father made a full recover but she knows only too well the importance for men to be aware of the life threatening disease.

Currently there are 250,000 men living with prostate cancer in the UK and it is the most common cancer in men. Prostate Cancer UK offers support to the one in eight men who will be diagnosed this year and are constantly fighting to help more men survive the disease and enjoy a better quality of life.

Drew Lindon, from Prostate Cancer UK, along with Tamzin and Colin are urging people to talk more about the disease and encourage you to submit any questions you may have about the disease. Log on to our live and interactive WebTV show for all you need to know about prostate cancer.

WEBTV SHOW LOGISTICS

Tamzin Outhwaite, Colin Outhwaite and Drew Lindon join us live online at 2.45pm on Tuesday 11th
Click here to submit questions before the show

 

 

FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT

Website: http://prostatecanceruk.org/