Excision with Open Healing:
(aka - secondary healing, healing from the bottom up, healing from
the inside out...)
What it is - In this procedure the cyst and sinuses are
completely removed. The resulting wound is left open to heal. This
is the slowest form of healing (8 weeks) but the one with the lowest
rate of infection and recurrence (5-15%). During healing the wound
must be cleaned out and re-packed with gauze at least twice daily.
Where it's done - Excision surgery is usually done at an outpatient
surgical center and takes an average of about 45 minutes; it is
typically done under MAC Anesthesia, Spinal Block or General Anesthesia. You will spend 4 to 5 hours
at the clinic and then go home afterwards.
Recovery time - Approx 8 weeks. The first week after the surgery
will be the worst and you really will need to be home resting during
this time. Most doctors will advise that you can return to work
after the first week. You will be advised not to drive for the first
few days after surgery (nor will you want to anyway.) Some
insurers will actually pay to have a home health nurse come and do
your packing changes twice daily. Otherwise, it is possible to
do packing changes yourself (I did all my own), but easier if you
have a spouse/family member/significant other to help.
What else you should know - An additional
technique called "Marsupialization" is also sometimes used (the edges of
the open wound are stitched all the way around like a button hole)
to keep the wound from closing too quickly. This speeds up healing
time by several weeks.
For a detailed account of a surgery with
open healing, see My Experience.
Excision with Primary Closure
(aka - healing by first intention, sutures, stitches)
What it is - In this procedure, the cyst and sinuses are removed and
the wound is closed with sutures/stitches.
Where it's done - Excision surgery is usually done at an outpatient
surgical center and takes an average of about 45 minutes; it is
typically done under MAC Anesthesia, Spinal Block or General Anesthesia. You will spend 4 to 5 hours
at the clinic and then go home afterwards.
Recovery time - Approx 4 weeks. The first week after the surgery
will be the worst and you really will need to be home resting during
this time. Most doctors will advise that you can return to work
after the first week. You will be advised not to drive for the first
few days after surgery.
What else you should know - Excision with primary closure is
an option for people who cannot undergo an 8 week
healing period. The drawback is that the infection rate is 20-25%
for this procedure and if you do get an infection then you will have
to go through open healing anyway.
-
More recent medical techniques
are now using Primary Closure with closed-suction drainage and
antiseptic flushing of the wound --this seems to greatly reduce the
infection rate, be sure to ask your surgeon about this if you are
considering Primary Closure.
-
It is
very important for sutured incisions in this surgery to be off the
midline. Make sure you discuss this with your doctor!
-
The danger with closed wound
incisions (especially those close or on the midline) is that
this area of the body moves in many directions during daily life
and this movement places a great deal of strain on the sutures,
especially those inside the wound.
-
Also note, surgical wound infections
can have very serious consequences (as in, fatal) so if you see
drainage, redness, odor or swelling get to your doctor ASAP.
For a detailed account of a surgery done
with closed healing, click here.
Cleft Lift / Modified Karydakis
(aka Cleft Closure)
What it is - These are both very
similar procedures developed in-line with discoveries by Karydakis
about the origins of pilonidal disease. In the Cleft Lift,
the actual shape of the cleft is changed to be more shallow and
allow for better healing. The surgery was originally developed to
deal with surgeries that had failed to heal or continued to recur
and is now being done more and more as a first surgery.
With the both techniques, the
surgeon removes an ellipse as he/she excises the pilonidal. The
resulting defect, a football shaped ellipse or "cavity", lies
parallel to the midline but to one side. The surgeon removes the
medial edge of the buttock. To cover the "cavity" the surgeon
undercuts the other side and pulls across the midline a flap of skin
and thick fat. The cleft becomes shallow and the single suture line
lies in open air to the left of the midline. By almost flattening
the cleft, the gathering of loose hairs is less likely, and the
there is no portal of entry left for hair entry (they always enter a
midline hole, not one on the side), thus greatly reducing the risk
of recurrence.
One of the key elements to both the Cleft Lift and the Modified
Karydakis are that all incisions are made to the side of the midline,
never right down the middle.
Where it's done - Hospital or Outpatient Surgical Center.
Usually scheduled as a day surgery with the patient going home that
evening. In some cases and overnight stay may be suggested.
Recovery time - Patients usually return to work after 2 weeks.
Healing is usually complete within 4 weeks.
What else you should know - Finding a surgeon doing this
technique is challenging, you may need to travel to a major city.
Also, your insurer may not cover the surgery, be prepared to fight
for it. Your surgeon may be willing to learn the surgery -
there is a DVD available and Dr. Bascom is happy to consult on cases
and provide support.
USA Surgeon List:
http://www.pilonidal.org/pdfs/PiloMDs_USA_3_2008.pdf
Non-USA Surgeon List:
http://www.pilonidal.org/pdfs/PiloMDs_NON_USA_3_2008.pdf
Surgeon Hall of Fame Forum:
http://www.pilonidal.org/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=25
For a detailed patient account of the Cleft Lift procedure, see
Kyle's Page.
For a medical description of the Cleft Lift by Dr. Bascom,
see this PDF.
For a medical description of the Karydakis Flap by Dr. Kitchen,
see this PDF.
For a YouTube video of the surgery, see this video *WARNING* this is
an actual surgery and is very graphic.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XucofeyyGb8
Other Flap Surgeries
(Limberg Flap, Z-Plasty,
Rotational Flap)
What it is - To treat pilonidals with a Limberg flap,
the surgeon removes an oblong-shaped plug containing pilonidal
abscess, skin and fat, thus creating a "cavity." To fill the
"cavity" the surgeon extends the cut laterally then downwards and
mobilizes a block or flap of skin and thick fat, from the buttock
beside and below the cavity. The surgeon swings the flap into the
center and pulls together the edges with sutures. The re-positioned
plug makes the cleft become shallow but leaves a more complex suture
line than after the Karydakis. The Limberg flap works well if
sutures are positioned out of the cleft. Rotation flaps
loosen the entire buttock and rotate it to move tissue into the
midline cavity. Z-plasty loosens triangular flaps on each
side of the midline to fill the cavity, with points of the flaps
toward the head and foot. The surgeon crosses the pointed flaps to
cross the midline in a horizontal direction, thus converts an N
shaped incision to a Z shaped closure.
Textbooks suggest the source of
pilonidal failure-to-heal is a "cavity" unfilled. Bascom reviewed
failed operations and found otherwise. Instead, pilonidal operations
fail when a surgeon leaves a suture line or an overhang within a
cleft, especially a deep and tight one. Operations succeed when a
surgeon reshapes the cleft, changes deep to shallow, and when he/she
moves the cleaned-out chronic abscess walls in place. Cleft lift
thus creates no cavity. The cleft lift operation, like a face lift
operation, moves flaps, but of skin only, not fat or muscle. Cleft
lift excises excess tissue, but skin only, and covers the walls of
the cleaned-out abscess with a thin flap; leaving the abscess wall
in place where it will heal. The resulting wound, like the Karydakis
operation, ends up with a vertical scar to one side of a shallower
midline. Because of its similarity in appearance it is sometimes
called a modified Karydakis operation.
Where it's done - Hospital, average stay of 3 to 5 days.
This is a major surgery that requires an overnight stay.
Recovery time - Patients usually return to work after 2 weeks.
Healing is usually complete within 4 weeks.
For a detailed account of a flap surgery, see
Cathy's Page.
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This page last updated:
05/06/2008
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