Hernia: DR Teamir Negussie Assistant Professor Dept of Surgery
Hernia: DR Teamir Negussie Assistant Professor Dept of Surgery
Hernia: DR Teamir Negussie Assistant Professor Dept of Surgery
Dr Teamir Negussie
Assistant Professor
Dept of Surgery
What is a hernia?
2.Contents:
Omentum, small or large intestine,
urinary bladder, Omentum, ovaries
malignant nodules or ascetic fluid.
3.Coverings:
derived from the layers of
abdominal wall.
Complications Of Hernias
• Irreducible
the hernia contents cannot be manipulated back into the abdominal
cavity.
• Incarcerated
the contents of the sac are literally inpresiond in the sac of Hernia.
• Obstruction
the loop of the bowel become non functioning with normal blood
supply .
• Strangulated
cut off the blood supply to the content sac (tender).
Causes of hernias
• Any condition that increases the pressure of the
abdominal & thoracic cavity may contribute to the
formation or worsening of a hernia.
– Obesity
– Heavy lifting
– Coughing
– Straining during a bowel movement or urination
– Chronic lung disease
– Fluid in the abdominal cavity
– Hereditary
– Surgery
Types of Abdominal Hernia
• Inguinal
• Femoral
• Epigastric
• Para umbilical
• Umbilical
• Incisional
• lumbar
• Spigelian
• hiatus
Signs and Symptoms of hernia
• The signs and symptoms of a hernia can range from
noticing a painless lump to the painful, tender, swollen
protrusion of tissue that you are unable to push back
into the abdomen—possibly a strangulated hernia.
– Asymptomatic reducible hernia
• New lump in the groin or other abdominal wall area
• May ache but is not tender when touched.
• Sometimes pain precedes the discovery of the lump.
• Lump increases in size when standing or when abdominal pressure is
increased (such as coughing)
• May be reduced (pushed back into the abdomen) unless very large
Cont.
– Irreducible hernia
• Usually painful enlargement of a previous hernia that cannot be returned into
the abdominal cavity on its own or when you push it
• Some may be long term without pain
• Can lead to strangulation
• Signs and symptoms of bowel obstruction may occur, such as nausea and
vomiting
– Strangulated hernia
• Irreducible hernia where the entrapped intestine has its blood supply cut off
• Pain always present followed quickly by tenderness and sometimes symptoms
of bowel obstruction (nausea and vomiting)
• You may appear ill with or without fever
• Surgical emergency
• All strangulated hernias are irreducible (but all irreducible hernias are not
strangulated)
Diagnosis
• If you have an obvious hernia, the doctor will not require any other tests
• If you have symptoms of a hernia the doctor may feel the area while increasing abdominal
pressure (having you stand or cough).
• All newly discovered hernias or symptoms that suggest you might have a hernia should
prompt a visit to the doctor.
• Hernias, even those that ache, if they are not tender and easy to reduce (push back into
the abdomen), are not surgical emergencies, but all have the potential to become serious.
• Referral to a surgeon should generally be made so that you can have surgery by choice
(called elective surgery) and avoid the risk of emergency surgery should your hernia
become irreducible or strangulated.
Treatment
• Treatment of a hernia depends on whether it is reducible or irreducible
and possibly strangulated.
– Reducible
• Can be treated with surgery but does not have to be.
– Irreducible
• All acutely irreducible hernias need emergency treatment because of the risk of
strangulation.
– An attempt to push the hernia back can be made
– Strangulation
• Operation
• Prevention
– You can do little to prevent areas of the abdominal wall from being
or becoming weak, which can potentially become a site for a hernia.
Inguinal Hernia
Inguinal canal
• Oblique passage in the lower part of the anterior abdominal wall.
• Spermatic cord
• Ilioinguinal nerve
Strangulation usually leads to bowel obstruction with sudden, severe pain in the hernia,
vomiting and irreducibility.
Nyhus Classification System
Diagnosis- Inspection
• Inguinal hernias are best examined with the patient
standing.
• Coughing may increase the size of the hernia.
• Site and shape of the hernia:
– those appearing above and medial to the pubic tubercle
are inguinal hernias
– those appearing below and lateral to the pubic tubercle
are femoral hernias
• whether the lump extends down into the scrotum
• any other scrotal swellings
• any swellings on the 'normal' side
• scar from previous surgery or trauma
Palpation
• Confirm inspectory findings
• Examine the scrotum- Getting above the swelling is
not possible
• Consistency, temperature, tenderness and fluctuance.
Advantages Disadvantages
•Quicker recovery •Needs surgeon highly
experienced
pass through the femoral canal -2 pass through the inguinal canal -2
neck of the sac is below and lateral -3 neck of the sac is above and medial -3
the pubic tubercle the pubic tubercle
- the two diagnostic signs of hernia -6 + the two diagnostic signs of hernia -6
the sac mainly contains ; omentum -7 the sac mainly contain ; bowel -7
Femoral hernia repair
Femoral hernias should be repaired very soon after the diagnosis has been
made because of the high risk of strangulation
There is no place for a truss for a femoral hernia
Different approaches :
Open VS Laparoscopic
– occurs when the upper part of the stomach, which is joined to the oesophagus (gullet), moves up into the chest through
the hole (called a hiatus) in the diaphragm.
– It is common and occurs in about 10 per cent of people.
• It is most common in overweight middle-aged women and elderly people.
• It can occur during pregnancy.
• The diagnosis is confirmed by barium meal X-rays or by passing a tube with a camera on the end into the
stomach (gastroscopy).
• Symptoms include:
– Heartburn
– Sudden regurgitation
– Belching
– Pain on swallowing hot fluids
– Feeling of food sticking in the oesophagus
• Treatment:
• Losing weight nearly always cures it.
• Eating small meals each day instead of 2 or 3 large ones helps.
• Avoid smoking.
• Take antacid.
• Avoid spicy food.
• Avoid hot drinks.
• Avoid gassy drinks
Types Cont.
• Spigelian hernia
– This rare hernia occurs along the edge of the rectus
abdominus muscle, which is several inches to the side of
the middle of the abdomen.
• Obturator hernia
– This extremely rare abdominal hernia happens mostly in
women.
– This hernia protrudes from the pelvic cavity through an
opening in your pelvic bone (obturator foramen).
– This will not show any bulge but can act like a bowel
obstruction and cause nausea and vomiting.
Summary