RESUMO
Abdominal assessment is one of a number of continuous assessments that critical care nurses undertake. Since 1988 in the Department of Critical Care Medicine (DCCM), the technique of abdominal decompression has become another therapy for severe critical illness. The critical care nurse requires to have an understanding of raised intra-abdominal pressure assessment, pressure measurement and the care of abdominal polypropylene mesh insertion in the critical care setting. Our experience has been that the use of polypropylene mesh insertion halved since 1993. A retrospective study (Torrie et al. 1996) of 68 occasions (64 patients) of polypropylene mesh insertion, showed that seven patients developed fistulas and 32 patients died. There was no dehiscence of the mesh from the fascia. Forty-two wounds had primary fascial closure (28 with primary skin closure, 3 with secondary skin closure, 11 left to granulate) and 3 of them later dehisced. At follow-up (27 patients, median 7.5 months), 6 had stitch sinuses, and 5 had incisional hernias. Care of patients with polypropylene mesh inserted requires vigilant nursing practice but decompression of raised intra-abdominal pressure can be life-saving and complications are manageable.