logo
Vaginal mesh particles ‘could trigger autoimmune response even after removal'

Vaginal mesh particles ‘could trigger autoimmune response even after removal'

Leader Live06-06-2025

Experts suggest allergy testing patients before they are fitted with mesh may help to better understand why complications happen in some cases.
Campaign group Sling the Mesh said the majority of its members have developed a reaction they believe is down to the material, including autoimmune diseases, unexplained rashes and chronic fatigue.
Transvaginal mesh (TVM) implants are made from synthetic materials such as polypropylene, a type of thermoplastic, and have been used to treat pelvic organ prolapse and incontinence after childbirth.
However, they can cause serious harm to some women, with side effects including infection, pelvic pain, and incontinence.
The NHS restricted its use of TVM implants in 2018 and they are now used only as a last resort through a high-vigilance programme of restricted practice.
A new article led by Dr Nicholas Farr, published in the journal Nature Reviews Urology, analysed studies which suggest polypropylene is a material which causes autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants (Asia).
Asia arises following exposure to substances that enhance the immune response in the likes of vaccines, silicone implants, or other foreign materials.
Symptoms can vary widely, but include chronic fatigue and chronic pain.
It comes after previous work by Dr Farr, who is a research fellow at the University of Sheffield, showed polypropylene mesh started to degrade within 60 days of being implanted in the pelvis of sheep.
The study also found particles of polypropylene in the tissue surrounding implant sites.
Dr Farr told the PA news agency: 'Our previous studies have shown that polypropylene mesh can degrade and leave behind particles within the surrounding tissues.
'This is important because it raises a key question – what kind of clinical response might these particles trigger?'
'Earlier studies have explored links between mesh implants and systemic symptoms resembling Asia. Patients often reported that symptoms improved after mesh removal, but in some cases, they didn't fully resolve.
'These cases were described as involving 'complete' mesh removal. But our findings challenge that definition.
'We've shown that even after the mesh has been surgically removed, polypropylene particles can persist in the tissue.
'So, it may not be a truly complete removal – and that could help explain why symptoms persist in a subset of patients.
'Our findings offer a new perspective on earlier studies, suggesting that residual particles might be a contributing factor in ongoing immune responses, even after the visible mesh is gone.'
Dr Farr called for 'increased clinical surveillance of mesh patients' to keep track of any autoimmune symptoms, as well as allergy tests to consider suitability before they are implanted.
He added: 'While it is important to recognise that the majority of mesh implants do not result in serious complications, we need to better understand why complications arise in a subset of patients and ensure those experiences are not overlooked.
'It is also essential that we engage with patients who have lived experience of mesh complications, as their insights are vital to improving future care and guiding the responsible development of safer medical devices.'
Reacting to Dr Farr's latest findings, Kath Sansom, founder of campaign group Sling The Mesh, told PA it 'confirms what thousands of mesh injured patients have been reporting for years – that polypropylene mesh can lead to autoimmune disease, fibromyalgia and allergic reactions'.
'For too long, our voices have been dismissed,' she added.
'Now, science is catching up, and it's imperative that regulators and manufacturers take immediate action to prevent further harm.'
Ms Sansom told PA the findings underscore the need for revaluation of the material used in mesh, along with the importance of 'patient-centred approaches'.
'The majority of our group – nearly 12,000 people – have developed some sort of reaction believed to be from the plastic mesh including a wide range of autoimmune diseases, unexplained rashes, IBS, dry eyes and chronic fatigue,' she added.
Sharron Mahoney, 57, claims the vaginal mesh she had implanted in 2010 caused her immune system to go 'into overdrive', with symptoms either easing or disappearing when she had it removed in 2018.
She said: 'After receiving a rectopexy mesh implant, I began suffering from a host of unexplained symptoms – severe fatigue, joint pain, recurring rashes, and food and chemical sensitivities that I had never experienced before.
'I couldn't grip anything, was losing my vision, had chronic cough, post nasal drip. Dry eyes. Stiff and sore muscles. Rashes on my skin.
'Doctors struggled to find a cause and treated me like a mystery – I later found out they put 'may be psychological' in my notes.
'When I finally had the mesh removed, the change was extraordinary – the allergic reactions instantly eased, my energy slowly returned, and many of the autoimmune symptoms diminished or disappeared entirely.
'My experience has left me in no doubt that the mesh was causing my immune system to go into overdrive.
'Patients need to be heard, and we need robust, long-term research and regulation to prevent others from suffering needlessly.'
A 2024 report by Patient Safety Commissioner Dr Henrietta Hughes highlighted that thousands of women's lives were 'destroyed' because of pelvic mesh.
It called for the Government to create a two-stage financial redress scheme.
However, in February – a year on from the report's publication – campaigners said they have 'faced silence', with no compensation scheme put in place.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ITV This Morning doctor says do this to cope with UK heatwave
ITV This Morning doctor says do this to cope with UK heatwave

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

ITV This Morning doctor says do this to cope with UK heatwave

Dr Raj Arora, a GP known for her TV appearances, issued advice for people living in the UK Brits are bracing themselves for another heatwave, with temperatures in the mid-30s expected for parts of the UK over the coming days. While many welcome the warm weather, it's essential that people take care in the heat. The NHS says: "When it's too hot, there are health risks. During heatwaves, more people than usual get seriously ill or die. If hot weather hits this summer, make sure it does not harm you or anyone you know." Keen to help, Dr Raj Arora, an NHS GP known for her appearances on ITV's This Morning, has shared a guide for staying safe. ‌ Posting on Instagram, she shared a post captioned: "Here are my top 5 tips to cope with a heatwave from a GP." In her caption, she also emphasised that "it's super important to maintain your safety." ‌ In her video, Dr Raj explained: "Number one sounds boring, but very relevant, keep hydrated. So keep your fluid levels up because as you sweat you are losing more fluid and not only does this put you at risk of lower blood pressure and therefore dizziness, but it also can exacerbate your risk of urinary tract infections and if you already have things like chronic kidney issues this can exacerbate those as well, so really important to keep yourself hydrated. "Also, try to reduce those drinks that are going to dehydrate you, so try and cut down on your alcohol, cut down on your caffeine, and up those refreshing drinks throughout the day." Next, the doctor explained how to keep your home or work environment cool. "Keep the windows closed, keep the curtains drawn so that there's less heat getting into the building," she advised. "Also, ensure that if you have an AC or a fan, you're using it and that it's helping to circulate cooler air where possible." Dr Raj explained that these steps are 'really important' to help keep your body temperature cool and keep you comfortable throughout the day. She continued: "Number three: dress smart, wear light, breathable fabrics like linen, cotton; wear lighter colours as well so you're not absorbing as much heat. "Really important to wear loose-fitting clothes as well, so you're not getting too hot and bothered in your clothing." As the GP pointed out, the UK's weather is often changeable. She suggested wearing layers for ease, and she recommended wearing a hat and sunglasses to provide shade and protect your skin. ‌ For her fourth tip, Dr Raj said: "Don't exert yourself as much as you normally would in the hot weather, so reduce your exercise and, if you are outdoors, seek shade." She explained that otherwise, you could be putting yourself at risk of heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Instead, she recommended timing your workout so you're not outside during the peak sunshine hours, from 11am to 3pm. Dr Raj concluded: "Number five: check on those around you." She said to check on vulnerable groups, such as the elderly, babies, and pets. This could involve checking they're not wearing too many layers, ensuring their environment is cool, and knowing the symptoms of heat exhaustion." ‌ She explained: "This is where you can have some dizziness, you might feel sick, you might feel like you have a headache, more tired, cramping in the body and the muscles, you might feel thirsty you might feel weak, you might also have a faster heart rate and a faster breathing rate as well. "If you're feeling these symptoms, you might have heat exhaustion, so it's really important that you take a step back, take some time to cool down, to have some fluids, to see if you can bring your body temperature down, if you can feel a bit better. Normally, the window is 30 minutes, so after 30 minutes of feeling no better, you must see a doctor and most people at this point might be going into heat stroke, so it's important actually to be seen urgently and to call 999." The GP warned: "Heat stroke is a medical emergency, and this is where you might have a persistent high heart rate, a persistent high breathing rate, you might have loss of consciousness, you might have confusion, some people might even have a seizure or a fit and a really high body temperature. If you have these symptoms, it's important that you call 999."

NHS keeps public away and patients are seen as 'inconvenience', health service's new boss says
NHS keeps public away and patients are seen as 'inconvenience', health service's new boss says

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

NHS keeps public away and patients are seen as 'inconvenience', health service's new boss says

The NHS has built 'mechanisms to keep the public away' as patients are seen as an 'inconvenience', its new boss has said. Sir Jim Mackey, who was made chief executive of NHS England on March 31, has publicly criticised the health service for often being 'deaf' to criticism and retaining 'fossilised' methods of working that are outdated. Ahead of the implementation of a 10-year health plan set to be published by the UK Government next week, Sir Jim told The Daily Telegraph that in recent years, the NHS has often 'made it really hard' for people to receive care. He added: 'You've got a relative in hospital, so you're ringing a number on a ward that no one ever answers. 'The ward clerk only works nine to five or they're busy doing other stuff; the GP practice scramble every morning. 'It feels like we've built mechanisms to keep the public away because it's an inconvenience.' Sir Jim also warned that if the growing disconnect between NHS services and the public is not rectified at 'pace', it could result in the loss of the public health service altogether. He said: 'If we lose the population, we've lost the NHS. For me, it's straightforward. The two things are completely dependent on each other'. It comes ahead of the Government's 10-year plan for the NHS, set to be unveiled next week. Aimed at improving services, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is reportedly set to link doctors' and nurses' pay to their success in bringing down waiting lists. Under the proposed plans, NHS patients could also be contacted several weeks after receiving treatment and asked if it was good enough for the hospital to get paid in full. If the patient says no, roughly 10 per cent of 'standard payment rates' are set to be diverted to a local 'improvement fund', the Times previously reported. The major revamp is also set to relocate patient care from hospitals to community-based health centers. Health Secretary Wes Streeting said on Wednesday that the plan will aim to 'address one of the starkest health inequalities', which he claims is the unequal access to information and choice when it comes to healthcare. For Sir Jim, the health service, first created in 1948, is in urgent need of a 're-orientation', with a shift in mindset from "it's going to be a pain if you turn up because I'm quite busy" to 'how do we find out what you need and get it sorted.' Having started his career in the NHS in 1990, Sir Jim also revealed that his concerns about the health service are predominantly driven by his own childhood experience, after his father died in a hospital 'known for its poor standards of care'. Adding that he will carry the trauma of his father's death 'for the rest of my life', the NHS England boss previously vowed to MPs that he would 'pick up the pace of reform' and tackle the widespread 'inefficiency'. In April, MailOnline revealed how Sir Jim is 'running the NHS from a train carriage' as he was caught watching Netflix in the middle of the afternoon before snoozing off. Sir Jim, who commutes 1,200 miles a week between the office in London and his Northumberland home, was also found by a Mail exclusive investigation to have left his laptop unlocked while using a train toilet. He openly displayed documents including one revealing details of an 'NHS leadership' meeting. And the health service chief slept half an hour - through an alert on his device reminding him of an online meeting. In response, former Conservative leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said: 'You couldn't make it up. 'It's not a great lesson in efficiency when you waste so much time travelling and falling asleep. You can't run the NHS from a train carriage. If you want to do the job properly, you've got to be in the office. It's what most businesses would demand.' But Health Secretary Wes Streeting backed his hire to lead the NHS, declaring: 'Jim is proving to be worth his weight in gold.' Sir Jim was initially appointed to oversee a dramatic cut in waste and inefficiency across the NHS, with the Government saying it wants to axe 50 per cent of corporate management jobs and use the savings of hundreds of millions of pounds to improve frontline services. It comes ahead of the Government's 10-year plan for the NHS, set to be unveiled next week. Aiming at improving services, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is reportedly set to link doctors' and nurses' pay to their success in bringing down waiting lists. (File image of an NHS waiting room) The transition' period under the Labour government is expected to take two years, with Sir Jim due to be the helmsman until then. In a bid to take pressure off hospitals and cut down waiting lists, the Government previously announced that 85 new mental health emergency departments will be built across England. The 85 units will be funded by £120million secured in the Spending Review, the Department of Health and Social Care said. Open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, they will be staffed by specialist nurses and doctors. Maternity wards are also expected to be among the first parts of UK hospitals to be placed under the microscope, after Streeting launched a full review into services across the country, saying that women had been 'ignored, gaslit [and] lied to' by the NHS. Previous plans unveiled by Mr Streeting revealed a diversion of more than £2billion in NHS spending to working class communities.

NHS treats patients as ‘inconvenience', says new boss
NHS treats patients as ‘inconvenience', says new boss

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

NHS treats patients as ‘inconvenience', says new boss

Sir Jim Mackey, the new NHS chief executive, warns that the health service risks collapse if it fails to address public frustrations, stating it has "built mechanisms to keep patients away". Sir Jim highlighted issues like the 8am GP appointment scramble and difficulties contacting hospital wards as examples of the NHS treating patients like an 'inconvenience'. He proposes significant reforms, including moving care from hospitals to local centres and drastically reducing routine outpatient follow-up appointments to free up resources. Sir Jim believes the NHS has wasted money and needs to be "de-layered" to improve efficiency, drawing on personal experiences of the system's failings with his own parents. Labour's upcoming 10-year NHS plan, to be unveiled by Wes Streeting, will focus on shifting care to the community, ending care disparities, and introducing "patient power payments" linked to satisfaction.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store