Joel-Cohen incision

Joel-Cohen incision is a skin incision used for Caesarian section. It is a straight incision that is 3 cm below the line joining both anterior superior iliac spines. It is more superior to the Pfannenstiel incision, another commonly used incision in obstetric surgery. Joel-Cohen incision rely on blunt dissection more than the traditionally done Pfannenstiel incision.[1] Joel-Cohen incision has lower rates of fever, hospital stay, post-operative pain and blood loss compared to Pfannenstiel incision. The operating time and use of analgesia are also less. Additionally, the time needed to get out of bed, walk without support and time for re-appearance of audible intestinal sounds were shorter in Joel-Cohen group than the Pfannenstiel group in a study conducted with 153 women.[2] In the two studies (with 411 participants) that compared the Joel-Cohen incision with the Pfannenstiel incision, the Joel-Cohen incision was associated with a 65% reduction in postoperative febrile morbidity.[3]

Technique

The skin incision is made 3 cm above the location of Pfannenstiel incision. The subcutaneous tissue is incised in three medial centimetres. The lateral tissue separation is done manually and the fascia is divided by blunt dissection using both index fingers. This incision is extended laterally by the fingers.[2]

References

  1. Berghella, Vincezo. "Caesarian Delivery: Technique". UptoDate. Woltez Kluwer. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  2. 1 2 Wessam, Abuelghar (2013). "Caesarean deliveries by Pfannenstiel versus Joel-Cohen incision: A randomised controlled trial". Journal of the Turkish German Gynaecological Association. 14 (4): 194–200. doi:10.5152/jtgga.2013.75725. PMC 3935539.
  3. Habib, Jaime. "Which Transverse Incisions Are Best for Cesarean Deliveries?". Physician Practise. UBM Medica. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
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