Hernias (femoral, inguinal, miscellaneous) Flashcards

1
Q

Define hernia.

A

The protrusion of a viscus or part of a viscus through a defect of the walls of its containing cavity into an abnormal position.

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2
Q

Define femoral hernia.

A

Intestinal projection across femoral canal associated with femoral aretry, vein; below inguinal ligament and lateral to pubic tubercle.

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3
Q

What are the borders of the femoral canal?

A
  • Medial border – lacunar ligament (and pubic bone)
  • Lateral border – femoral vein (and ilipsoas)
  • Anterior border – inguinal ligament.
  • Posterior border – pectineal ligament, superior ramus of the pubic bone, and the pectineus muscle

The neck of the hernia is felt inferior and lateral to the pubic tubercle (inguinal hernias are superior and medial to this point).

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4
Q

What is the epidemiology of hernias?

A

Females get more femoral

Males get more inguinal

INDIRECT hernias are 5 times more common than direct hernias (this is due to persistence of the processus vaginali

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5
Q

What is the aetiology of femoral hernias?

A
  • Congenital, acquired
  • Weakness/abnormal fasical opening in abdominal wall
  • Usually includes properitoneal fat/omentum edge/small bowel loop
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6
Q

What are the risk factors for a femoral hernia?

A
  • Biologically - female - they have wider pelvis
  • Congenital disorder (embryological development –> processus vaginalis obliteration failure)
  • FH
  • Obesity
  • Pregnancy
  • Frequent heavy lifting
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7
Q

What are the signs and symptoms of a femoral hernia?

A
  • Asymptomatic (commonly)
  • Can manifest as intestinal obstruction symptoms:
    • Bulging mass, pain, discomfort
    • Supine: may resolve
  • Valsalva maneouvre (coughing/straining) worsens
  • Abdominal contents enter hernia –> may precipitate intestinal obstruction -
    • Most common cause worldwide.
    • Incarcerated/strangulated causes severe abdominal pain, tenderness, erythema, fever, nausea, vomiting
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8
Q

What investigations would you do for femoral hernias? What would they show?

A

Usually clinical diagnosis and no imaging needed.

USS - variable echogenicity of tissues. Movement of intra-abdominal structures in an inferior direction through the femoral canal.

CT - Visualisation of characteristic funnel-shaped neck; protrusion through femoral ring

Usually hernias are diagnosed clinically by physical examination but imaging may be necessary in obese patients.

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9
Q

What is the management of femoral hernias?

A

Surgery:

  • Repair - open/laproscopic (case dependent)
  • Early/elective repair - uncomplicated/asymptomatic hernia
  • Urgent repair - complicated hernia (may require bowel resection)

Femoral hernias, usually need operative intervention. This should ideally an elective (non-emergency) procedure. However, because of the high incidence of complications, femoral hernias often need emergency surgery

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10
Q

What are the complications of hernias?

A
  • Irreducible: contents cannot be pushed back into place
  • Strangulated hernia = vascular compromise, surgical emergency
  • Obstructed hernia = obstruction of lumen within hernia e.g. bowel obstruction
  • Incarcerated hernia = irreducible; contents of the hernial sac are stuck inside by adhesions

Care must be taken with reduction as it is possible to push an incarcerated hernia back into the abdominal cavity, giving the initial appearance of successful reduction.

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11
Q

What is the prognosis with femoral hernias?

A
  • Usually depends on the extent of bowel compromised
  • Patients go home the same day as surgery
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12
Q

What is the management of hernias?

A

Conservative -

  • Do nothing
  • Wear a trus

Surgical

  • Herniotomy is ligation and excision of the sac
  • Herniorrhaphy is repair of the hernial defect.
  • Mesh repair - open or laproscopic
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13
Q

What are differentials for a femoral hernia?

A

1 Inguinal hernia.

2 Saphena varix.

3 An enlarged Cloquet’s node

4 Lipoma.

5 Femoral aneurysm.

6 Psoas abscess.

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14
Q

What are the walls of the inguinal canal?

A

Floor: Inguinal ligament and lacunar ligament medially;

Roof: Fibres of transversalis, internal oblique;

Anterior: External oblique aponeurosis + internal oblique for the lateral ⅓;

Posterior: Laterally, transversalis fascia; medially, conjoint tendon.

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15
Q

Describe direct inguinal hernia.

A

Peritoneal sac projects directly through the inguinal triangle (aka Hesselbach’s triangle)

Projects medially to inferior epigastric vessels lateral to rectus abdomini and pierces the peritoneum. It is covered by external spermatic fascia.

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16
Q

Describe indirect inguinal hernias.

A
  • Most common type of hernia
  • Intestinal projection through internal inguinal ring
    • Location - spermatic cord (in amale), round ligament (in female) exit the abdomen
    • Testicular descent path - covered by three layers of spermatic fascia: external spermatic fascia (external oblique continuation), cremasteric muscle fascia, internal spermatic fascia (internal oblique fascia continuation)
17
Q

What is the aetiology of indirect inguinal hernias?

A

Processus vaginalis closure failure - internal inguinal ring and processus vaginalis obliteration failure

18
Q

What is the aetiology of direct inguinal hernias? What is the pathophysiology?

A

ALWAYS acquired therefore unusual below age 25

A direct inguinal hernia occurs because of degeneration and fatty changes in the aponeurosis of the transversalis fascia that constitutes the inguinal floor or posterior wall in the Hesselbach triangle area.

Most direct hernias do not have a true peritoneal lining and do not contain bowel, but mainly preperitoneal fat, and occasionally bladder.

19
Q

With which type of inguinal hernia is strangulation more common?

A

INDIRECT - strangulation more common because there is a sharply defined ring which might have a narrow neck

DIRECT - less common to get strangulation as structural defect in a direct hernia is usually a diffuse weakness and stretching of the inguinal floor tissues

20
Q

How common are inguinal hernias?

A
  • Indirect is 5x more common than direct and 7x more common in males due to the persistence of the processus vaginalis during testicular descent.
  • Lifetime risk in women is 3% and 27% for men
  • Inguinal hernia is bilateral in 20% of affected adults
  • FH associated with increased
  • In children, the vast majority of inguinal hernias are indirect.
21
Q

What are the risk factors for inguinal hernia?

A
  • Male sex
  • Old age
  • FH
  • AAA - persistently increased leukocytosis and reduced anti-proteolytic activity
  • Smoking - decreased alpha-1 antitrypsin and elevated serum
  • Chronic bronchitis or emphysema - chronic cough increases IAP
  • Previous surgery
  • Defective transversalis fascia
  • Prematurity - up to a third of male babies born weighing less than 1500g require hernia operation by age 8yrs
  • Marfan syndrome
  • Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
  • Lathyrism - neurotoxic disease caused by ingestion of certain types of legumes

Weak: heavy lifting, pregnancy, ascites, BPH, urethral stricture.

22
Q

Which inguinal hernia:

Can form a hydrocele, may precipitate intestinal obstructio and is the most common cause of hernia worldwide?

A

Indirect inguinal

23
Q

Signs and symptoms of an inguinal hernia?

A
  • Groin discomfort or pain with bulge - (often described as dull, heaviness, dragging, and sometimes burning)
  • Groin mass
  • Abdominal discomfort or pain - poorly localised pain, indicative of stretch in the hernia sac
  • Acute abdomen - tender, distended abdomen with absent bowel sounds = stangulated hernia
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Constipation
24
Q

What investigations would you do for inguinal hernias?

A

NB: usually clinical diagnosis

US -

  • Direct inguinal hernia - variable echogenicity of tissue; movement of intra-abdominal structures in an anterior direction through the Hesselbach triangle
  • Indirect inguinal hernia - visualisation through abdominal wall in biologically-female individuals

CT:

  • Direct inguinal hernia - visualisation of a protrusion with compression inguinal canal contents; inguinal canal pushed into a semicircle of tissue that resembles a moon crescent
  • Indirect inguinal hernia - identifies occult hernia/complications; hernia neck visualised superloateral to the inferior epigastric vessels
25
Q

What is the management of inguinal hernias?

A
  • Open/laparoscopic (case-dependent)
  • Elective repair - symptomatic hernias
  • Direct inguinal hernia (asymptomatic) - monitor, surgical repair preferred
26
Q

Name 5 different types of hernia.

A
27
Q

Describe paraumblilical hernias.

A
  • occur just above or below the umbilicus.
  • Risk factors are obesity and ascites.
  • Omentum or bowel herniates through the defect.
  • Surgery involves repair of the rectus sheath (Mayo repair).
28
Q

Where does an epigastric hernia pass through?

A

Linea alba above umbilicus

29
Q

Why do incisional hernias occur?

A
  • Breakdown of muscle closure after surgery (11–20%).
  • If obese, repair is not easy.
  • Mesh repair has ↓recurrence but ↑infection over sutures
30
Q

What is the location of spigelian hernias?

A

Occur through the linea semilunaris at the lateral edge of the rectus sheath, below and lateral to the umbilicus.

31
Q

What is an obturator hernia?

A

occur through the obturator canal. Typically there is pain along the medial side of the thigh in a thin woman.

32
Q

What is a sciatic hernia?

A

Pass through the lesser sciatic foramen (a way through various pelvic ligaments). gi obstruction + a gluteal mass suggests this rare possibility.

33
Q

What is a sliding hernia?

A

Contain a partially extraperitoneal structure (eg caecum on the right, sigmoid colon on the left). The sac does not completely surround the contents.

34
Q

Where do lumbar hernias occur?

A

Occur through the inferior or superior lumbar triangles in the posterior abdominal wall.

35
Q

What is the most common type of paediatric hernia? Why do they occur? What is the treatment?

A

Umbilical hernias: (3% of live births). Are a result of a persistent defect in the transversalis fascia. Surgical repair rarely needed as most resolve by the age of 3

36
Q

What is a common type of male paediatric hernia?

A

Indirect inguinal hernias (~4% of all ♂ infants due to patent processus vaginalis—prematurity is a risk factor;

Uncommon in ♀ infants—consider testicular feminization.

Surgical repair is required.

37
Q

What is the name for the paediatric condition where abdominal contents are found outside the abdomen, covered in a three-layer membrane consisting of peritoneum, Wharton’s jelly, and amnion?

A

Exomphalos

38
Q

Is exomphalos a surgical emergency?

A

Surgical repair less urgent because the bowel is protected by three membranes.

39
Q

What is gastroschisis?

A

Paediatric hernia - Protrusion of the abdominal contents through a defect in the anterior abdominal wall to the right of the umbilicus. Prompt surgical repair required.