RT Journal A1 Higgins GA, Jr., Antkowiak JG, Esterkyn SH T1 A clinical and laboratory study of abdominal wound closure and dehiscence JF Archives of Surgery JO Archives of Surgery YR 1969 FD April 1 VO 98 IS 4 SP 421 OP 427 DO 10.1001/archsurg.1969.01340100053005 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1969.01340100053005 AB Dehiscence and evisceration of abdominal incisions continues to be a serious postoperative problem with a high morbidity and mortality.1-3 Factors such as improved preoperative and postoperative support of the patient, improved methods of anesthesia, and the use of antibiotics which should decrease the incidence of this postoperative complication, have been counterbalanced by the increasing age span of patients undergoing surgery and the magnitude of surgical procedures, particularly for neoplastic and degenerative diseases, to keep the incidence of wound disruption at a fairly constant although highly variable level as reported in the many studies in the literature. In an excellent study of this problem spanning the years 1930 to 1964, Guiney et al4 have shown an actual increase in the incidence of this postoperative complication at the same hospital during recent years, presumably due to the factors mentioned above. Dehiscence, literally a gaping, is the term used to describe