Adoption of a standardized treatment protocol for pilonidal disease leads to low recurrence

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Talha Rafeeqi, Claire Abrajano, Fereshteh Salimi-Jazi, Deanna Garza, Emi Hartman, Kira Hah, Melissa Wilcox, Modupeola Diyaolu, Stephanie Chao, Wendy Su, Thomas Hui, Claudia Mueller, Julie Fuchs, Bill Chiu Published:

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Talha Rafeeqi, Claire Abrajano, Fereshteh Salimi-Jazi, Deanna Garza, Emi Hartman, Kira Hah, Melissa Wilcox, Modupeola Diyaolu, Stephanie Chao, Wendy Su, Thomas Hui, Claudia Mueller, Julie Fuchs, Bill Chiu

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Sacrococcygeal pilonidal disease affects 26 out of 100,000 patients annually, with men affected twice as often as women, usually between 15-30 years old with a median age of 16 [1,2]. There are two principal theories regarding the pathophysiology of this disease: it may arise due to the congenital presence of a subcutaneous pilonidal sinus, or the more widely accepted theory that it may be acquired due to microtrauma causing traction on the hair follicles [1]. This leads to hair growing into pits with an inflammatory foreign body reaction.

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