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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Robotic repair of diaphragmatic hernia after chest surgery

By Prasanna A et al.ยท2026ยทDepartment of Surgery, United StatesยทView original on Europe PMC โ†’

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Original publication title: A case report of robotic-assisted repair of transabdominal diaphragmatic hernia after sternectomy with omental flap reconstruction.

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Plain-English summary

This case involves a 70-year-old female who had heart surgery and developed a serious infection that required part of her breastbone to be removed and a piece of tissue from her abdomen to be used for reconstruction. After this surgery, she started having trouble breathing, chest pain, and was unable to eat well. Doctors found that she had a large hernia, which is when abdominal contents push through a weak spot in the diaphragm (the muscle that separates the chest from the abdomen), at the site of the reconstruction. They successfully repaired this hernia using a robotic-assisted technique, which is a first for this type of situation. The treatment worked well to fix the hernia.

Abstract

<h4>Introduction</h4>Deep sternal wound infection is a serious complication after sternotomy for cardiac surgery. Management can necessitate sternectomy with chest wall reconstruction using a pedicled omental flap, which requires an iatrogenic defect in the diaphragm. This defect can ultimately develop into a larger diaphragmatic hernia and necessitate repair.<h4>Case presentation</h4>Our patient was a 70-year-old female with partial sternectomy with omental flap reconstruction after coronary artery bypass surgery who presented with dyspnea, chest pain, and poor food tolerance. Imaging confirmed a large, diaphragmatic hernia at the site of omental flap and was ultimately repaired primarily using a robotic-assisted approach.<h4>Discussion</h4>This case highlights a serious complication related to omental flap reconstruction after sternectomy. Repair of the hernia defect can either be accomplished primarily or with mesh. We pursued primary repair given that there was inadequate adjacent tissue to secure mesh and to preserve the omental flap vascular pedicle.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Deep sternal wound infections after cardiac surgery can be managed with sternectomy and a pedicled omental flap. The iatrogenic diaphragm defect created can result in herniation of abdominal contents into the chest. Our case report is the first to describe a robotic approach for repairing an intentionally created diaphragmatic defect.

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Original publication on Europe PMC: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/41847101