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PatientPlus articles are written for doctors and so the language can be technical. However, some people find that they add depth to the articles found in the other sections of this website which are written for non-medical people.

Inguinal Hernias

This comprises a protrusion of abdominal contents through the fascia of the abdominal wall, through the internal inguinal ring. Hernias always contain a portion of peritoneal sac and may contain viscera, usually small bowel and omentum.

INGUINAL HERNIA (OM295a.jpg)

Epidemiology

Hernias comprise approximately 7% of all surgical outpatient visits.

  • M:F 8:1
  • Affects 1-3% of young children

Risk Factors

Presentation
  • Swelling in groin that may appear with lifting and be accompanied by sudden pain
  • Indirect hernias are more prone to cause pain in scrotum and cause a 'dragging sensation'
  • An impulse (increase in swelling) may be palpable on coughing
  • May not be able to see the hernia if it is reduced
  • If a lump is present, it may be reducible
Inguinal Hernias

Inguinal hernias in adults usually develop gradually, but can occur suddenly with episode of heavy lifting as 'rupture'.
At first appearance, hernia is usually easily reducible when patient reclines, but may require manual replacement if large.
With time the hernia enlarges and becomes harder to replace, due to fibrous adhesions forming. When it can no longer be reduced, it is irreducible or incarcerated.
This can occur at any time, as can strangulation. This is when visceral contents of the hernia become twisted or entrapped by the narrow opening. This compromises the blood supply causing swelling, and eventually infarction.
Strangulation leads to bowel obstruction.

There are two types of inguinal hernia:

  • Indirect; a protrusion through the internal inguinal ring passes along the inguinal canal through the abdominal wall. This is the commoner form accounting for 80% of inguinal hernias, especially in children. It is associated with failure of the inguinal canal to close properly after passage of testis in utero or during neonatal period.1
  • Direct; hernia protrudes directly through the abdominal wall into inguinal canal. It is more common in the elderly and rare in children.

Less common form is the sliding hernia where portion of viscera slides behind the peritoneal sac into the inguinal canal with the wall of the organ forming part of the hernial sac.

Assessment

  • Examine patient both standing and lying and ask him to cough or strain.
  • Insert finger through top of scrotum into external inguinal ring and palpate for viscera herniating into canal when coughing.
  • Not necessary to decide whether direct or indirect at this point but herniation into the scrotum is usually indirect.
  • Sliding hernias are probable with large scrotal hernias.
Differential Diagnosis
  • Femoral hernia; these are seen in various forms, at simplest as a small swelling in the top of the inside of the thigh. Alternatively, it may be deflected to appear higher as an inguinal hernia. It is either irreducible or reduces only slowly with pressure.
  • Spermatic cord hydrocoele
  • Lymph node swelling
  • Abscess
  • Varicocoele
  • Bleeding
  • Undescended testis
Investigations

If in doubt, herniography with injection of X-ray contract agent into peritoneum.
Alternatively, ultrasound can be useful.2

Management

If the hernia is small, the patient may only need reassurance. However, there is always the chance of it becoming a surgical emergency through obstruction and incarceration. Episodes of pain and tenderness suggest need for urgent treatment, but when these become prolonged and severe then emergency surgery is indicated for possible strangulation.
The fundamentals of indirect inguinal hernia repair are the same regardless of the patient's age. Reduction or excision of the sac and closure of the defect with minimal tension are the essential steps in any hernia repair.

  • Conventional surgery is based on Bassini's operation; this consists of apposition of the transversus abdominis and transversalis fascia and the lateral rectus sheath to the inguinal ligament. The Shouldice uses 2 layers of running suture in similar fashion.
  • However, Lichtenstein technique is widely used where piece of open-weave polypropylene mesh is used to repair and reinforce the abdominal wall.3 This operation is easier to learn, gives earlier mobility and has a very low recurrence rate. The standard repair now uses prostheses, usually polypropylene mesh. It is however, associated with a slightly increased risk of infection.4
  • Laparoscopic repair is usually reserved for recurrences and bilateral hernias. There is less postoperative pain, full recovery is better, and return to work is faster. However, the price is increased compared to the conventional approach.5
  • Surgery can be performed on a day case basis and for 7 days afterwards the patient should avoid driving and lifting. The patient should be able to resume normal activities over next 2-3 weeks, but can take up to 6 weeks to return to work with a heavy job.
  • A truss may all that is required where surgery is inadvisable or refused.
  • In young children, herniotomy is all that is required with ligation and excision of the patent processus vaginalis.
Complications

These include:

  • Recurrence; 0.5-1.0% - most happening within 5 years of operation. The recurrence rate increases in:
    • Children younger than 1 year
    • Elderly patients
    • After incarcerations
    • In those with ongoing increased intra-abdominal pressure
    • Growth failure
    • Prematurity
    • Chronic respiratory problems
    • In girls with sliding hernias
  • Infarcted testis or ovary with atrophy
  • Wound infection
  • Bladder injury
  • Intestinal injury
  • A hydrocele from fluid accumulation in the distal sac usually resolves spontaneously but sometimes requires aspiration.
Prognosis

Generally very good, depending on co-morbidity.


Document References
  1. van Wessem KJ, Simons MP, Plaisier PW, et al; The etiology of indirect inguinal hernias: congenital and/or acquired? Hernia. 2003 Jun;7(2):76-9. Epub 2003 Mar 18. [abstract]
  2. Lilly MC, Arregui ME; Ultrasound of the inguinal floor for evaluation of hernias. Surg Endosc. 2002 Apr;16(4):659-62. Epub 2001 Dec 17. [abstract]
  3. Sakorafas GH, Halikias I, Nissotakis C, et al; Open tension free repair of inguinal hernias; the Lichtenstein technique. BMC Surg. 2001;1:3. Epub 2001 Oct 15. [abstract]
  4. Golladay E; Abdominal Hernias; eMedicine 2005
  5. Hernia - laparoscopic surgery, NICE (2004)
Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Hayley Willacy for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2007.
DocID: 2324
Document Version: 22
DocRef: bgp295
Last Updated: 4 Sep 2007
Review Date: 3 Sep 2009




















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