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Hernia

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Title: Hernia


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Hernia
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  • Definition
  • A hernia is a protrusion of a viscus or
    a part of viscus through an abnormal opening in
    the walls of its containing cavity.
  • The external abdominal hernia is the
    most common form. The most frequent varieties are
    the inguinal, femoral and umbilical.

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  • General features common to all hernias
  • Aetiology
  • Any condition that increase the intra
    abdominal pressure such as a powerful muscular
    effort may produce a hernia.
  • Whooping cough is a predisposing cause
    in childhood, whereas a chronic cough, straining
    on micturition or straining on defecation may
    precipitate a hernia in an adult.
  • It should be remembered that appearance
    of hernia in an adult can be a sign of intra
    abdominal malignancy.
  • Obesity is an another factor, fat acts
    to separate muscle bundles and layers, weakens
    apponeurosis and leads to appearance of hernia (
    para-umbilical, direct inguinal and hiatus hernia
    ).
  • Hernia is more common in smokers which
    is due to acquired collagen deficiency increasing
    the risk of hernia

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  • Compisition of a hernia
  • Hernia consists of three parts sac,
    coverings and the contents.
  • Sac
  • It is a diverticulum of peritoneum consisting
    of
  • 1 Mouth. 2 Neck. 3 Body.
    4 - Fundus.
  • The neck is usually well defined but in some
    direct inguinal hernias and in many incisional
    hernias there is no actual neck. The diameter of
    the neck is important because strangulation of
    bowel is a likely complication when the neck is
    narrow as in femoral hernia and para-umbilical
    hernias.
  • Covering
  • Derived from the layers of the abdominal
    wall through which the sac passes.

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  • Contents
  • These can be
  • Omentum omentocele.
  • Intestine interocele ( maily the small
    bowel but may be the large bowel ).
  • A portion of the circumference of the
    bowel Richters hernia.
  • A portion of the bladder.
  • Ovary with or without the corresponding
    tube.
  • A Meckels diverticulum Littres hernia.
  • Fluid.

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  • Classification
  • Irrespective of site, a hernia can be
    classified into 5 different types
  • 1 Reducible. 2 Irreducible. 3
    Obstructed.
  • 4 Strangulated. 5 Inflammed.
  • Reducible hernia hernia either reduce itself
    when the patient lies down or can be reduced by
    the patient or the surgeon. Such a hernia (
    reducible ) gives an expansible impulse on
    coughing.
  • Irreducible hernia in case the contents cannot
    be returned to the abdomen but there is no
    evidence of other complications. It is usually
    due to adhesions between the sac and the contents
    or overcrowding within the sac. Any degree of
    irreducibility predisposes to strangulation.

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  • Obstructed hernia It is irreducible hernia
    containing intestine that is obstructed from
    without or within but there is no interference
    to the blood supply to the bowel. The symptoms
    (colicky abdominal pain and tenderness over the
    hernia site) but less severe and onset is more
    gradual than in strangulated hernias. Usually
    there is no clear distinction clinically between
    obstruction and strangulation and the safe course
    is to assume that strangulation is imminent and
    treat accordingly.

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  • Incarcerated hernia
  • The term incarceration is often used loosely as
    an alternative to
  • obstruction or strangulation but is correctly
    employed only when
  • it is considered that the lumen of that portion
    of the colon
  • occupying a hernial sac is blocked with faeces.
    In this case, the
  • scybalous contents of the bowel should be capable
    of being
  • indented with the finger, like putty.

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  • Strangulated hernia
  • A hernia becomes strangulated when the blood
    supply of its content is seriously impaired,
    rendering the contents ischaemic. Gangrene may
    occur as early as 5-6 hours after the onset of
    the first symptoms. Although inguinal hernia is
    more common than femoral hernia, a femoral hernia
    is more likely to strangulate because of the
    narrowness of the neck and its rigid surrounds.
  • Pathology The intestinal blood supply is
    impaired. Initially, only the venous return is
    impeded, the wall of the intestine becomes
    congested and bright red with the transudation of
    serous fluid into the sac. As congestion
    increases the wall of the intestine becomes
    purple in color. The intestinal pressure
    increases, distending the intestinal lop and
    impairing venous return further. As venous stasis
    increases, the arterial supply becomes more and
    more impaired. Blood is extravasataed under the
    serosa and is effused into the lumen.

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  • The fluid in the sac becomes blood stained
    and shining serosa dull because of a fibrinous,
    sticky exudate. At this stage the walls of the
    intestine have lost their tone and become
    friable. Bacterial transudation occurs secondary
    to the lowered intestinal viability and the sac
    fluid becomes infected. Gangrened appears at the
    rings of constriction, which becomes deeply
    indented and grey in color. The gangrene then
    then develops in the ant mesenteric border, the
    color varying from black to green depending on
    the decomposition of the blood in the subserosa.
    The mesentery involved by the strangulation also
    becomes gangerenous. If the strangulation is
    unrelieved, perforation of the wall of the
    intestine occurs, either at the convexity of the
    loop or at the seat of constriction. Peritonitis
    spreads from the sac to the peritoneal cavity.

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  • Clinical features Sudden pain at first
    situated over the hernia, is followed by
    generalized abdominal pain, colicky in character
    and often located mainly at the umbilicus. Nausea
    and subsequently vomiting. The patient may
    complain of an increase in hernia size.
  • On examination the hernia is tense,
    extremely tender and irreducible and no expansile
    cough impulse.
  • Unless the strangulation is relieved by
    operation, the spasms of pain continue until
    peristaltic contractions cease with the onset of
    ischemia, when paralytic ileus ( often the result
    of peritonitis ) and septicaemia develops.
    Spontaneous cessation of pain must be viewed with
    caution, as this may be a sign of perforation

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  • Strangulated hernia
  • Present with local then general abdominal pain
    and vomiting
  • A normal hernia can strangulate at any time
  • Most common in hernias with narrow necks such
    as
  • femoral hernias
  • Require urgent surgery

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  • Imflammed hernia inflammation can occur from
    inflammation of the contents of the sac as eg.
    acute appendicitis or salpingitis.
  • Inflammation can happen from external
    causes eg. Trophic ulcers that developes in the
    depending areas of large umbilical or incisional
    hernias.
  • The hernia is usually tender but not tense
    and the overlying skin red and oedematous.
    Treatment is based on treatment of the inderlying
    cause.

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  • Inguinal Hernia
  • Surgical anatomy
  • The superficial inguinal ring is a
    triangular aperature in the aponeurosis of the
    external oblique muscle lies 1.25 cm above the
    pubic tubercle.
  • The deep inguinal ring is a U shaped
    condesation of the transervalis fascia and it
    lies 1.25 cm above the inguinal ligament

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  • An indirect hernia travels down the canal on
    the outer side of the spermatic cord. A direct
    hernia comes out directly forwards through the
    posterior wall of the inguinal canal. Whereas the
    neck of the indirect hernia is lateral to the
    inferior epigastric artery, the neck of the
    direct hernia is medial to the artery.
  • An inguinal hernia can be differentiated
    from femoral hernia by the ascertaining the
    relation of the neck of the sac to the medial end
    of the inguinal ligament and the pubic tubercle.
    In the case of an inguinal hernia, the neck is
    above and medial, whereas that of a femoral
    hernia is below and lateral

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  • Indirect inguinal hernia
  • It is the most common type of hernia. It is
    more common in the young while the direct type is
    more common in the old. In the first decade of
    life, inguinal hernia is more common on the right
    side in the male. This is associated with the
    later descent of the right testis and a higher
    incidence of failure of closure of the process
    vaginalis.
  • Clinical features
  • We start examining the patient in standing
    position with asking the patient to cough and
    feel the cough impulse. Then examiner should now
  • Is the hernia is right, left or bilateral.
  • Is it inguinal or femoral.
  • Is it direct or indirect.
  • Is it reducible or not.
  • Is it complete or not.
  • What are the contents

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  • The patient complains of pain in the groin or
    pain referred to the testicles when performing
    heavy wok or taking strenuous exercise. In large
    hernias there is a sensation of weight and
    dragging on the mesentery which may produce
    epigastric pain.
  • Differential diagnosis in the male
  • 1 Vaginal hydrocele.
  • 2 Encysted hydrocele of the cord.
  • 3 Spermatocele.
  • 4 Femoral hernia.
  • 4 Incompletely descended testis.
  • 5 Lipoma of the cord.
  • Differential diagnosis in the female
  • 1 Hydrocele of the canal of Nuck.
  • 2 Femoral hernia.

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Note that examination using finger and thumb
across the neck of the scrotum will help to
distinguish between a swelling of inguinal origin
and one that is entirely intrascrotal.
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  • Treatment
  • Operation is the treatment of choice. (
    Herniotomy Herniorrhaphy )
  • Herniotomy means dissecting out and
    opening the hernial sac, reducing any content
    then transfixing the neck of the sac and removing
    the remainder. By itself it is sufficient for the
    treatment of hernia in children and young adults.
  • Herniorrhaphy consist of
  • 1 repair of the stretches internal ring
    and transversalis fascia.
  • 2 further reinforcement of the
    posterior wall of the inguinal canal.

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  • A truss may be used when operation is
    contraindicated or refused. In this condition if
    the truss to be used the hernia should be
    reducible.
  • Its use should be mainly historical, as
    there are very few contraindications to surgery
    with todays variety of anaesthetic techniques.

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  • Direct inguinal hernia
  • It is always acquired. The passes through a
    weakness or a defect of the transversalis fascia
    in the posterior wall of the inguinal canal.
    Predisposing factors are smoking and occupations
    that involves straining or heavy lifting. Damage
    to the ilioinguinal nerve (previous
    appendicectomy) is another cause, because of the
    resulting weakness of the conjoined tendon.
    Direct hernia do not often attain a large size or
    reach to the scrotum. In contrast to the indirect
    hernia, the direct lies behind the spermatic
    cord. As the neck is wider than that of indirect
    inguinal hernia, direct inguinal hernia do not
    often strangulate.
  • Treatment the principles of repair of direct
    hernia are the same as those of an indirect
    hernia, with the exception that the hernia sac
    can usually be simply inverted after it has been
    dissected free and the transversalis fascia
    reconstructed in front of it. This repair can be
    done also by mesh which is also true for indirect
    hernia repair.

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