Hernia: Symptoms

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Hernia

A hernia is the protrusion of an organ or the fascia of an organ through the wall of the cavity that normally contains.. the most common herniae develop in the abdomen when a weakness in the abdominal wall evolves into a localized hole, or "defect", through which adipose tissue or abdominal organs covered with peritoneum, may protrude. Another common hernia involves the spinal discs and causes sciatica. Sometimes hernias occur with heavy lifting. Hernias may be present at birth, but the bulging may not be noticeable until later in life. Some patients may have a family history of hernias. Any activity or medical problem that increases pressure on the abdominal wall tissue and muscles may lead to a hernia, including:

Chronic constipation, straining to have bowel movements


Chronic cough Cystic fibrosis Enlarged prostate, straining to urinate Extra weight Heavy lifting Poor nutrition Smoking Overexertion Undescended testicles

Symptoms
Most often there are no symptoms. However, sometimes there may be discomfort or pain. The discomfort may be worse when you stand, strain, or lift heavy objects.

Although a hernia may only cause mild discomfort, it may get bigger and strangulate. This means that the tissue is stuck inside the hole and its blood supply has been cut off. If this occurs, you will need urgent surgery. Sign A doctor can confirm the presence of a hernia during a physical exam. The mass may increase in size when coughing, bending, lifting, or straining. The hernia (bulge) may not be obvious in infants and children, except when the child is crying or coughing. In some cases, an ultrasound may be needed to look for a hernia.

Indirect hernia
An indirect inguinal hernia follows the tract through the inguinal canal. This results from a persistent process vaginalis. The inguinal canal begins in the intraabdominal cavity at the internal inguinal ring, located approximately midway between the pubic symphysis and the anterior iliac spine. The canal courses down along the inguinal ligament to the external ring, located medial to the inferior epigastric arteries, subcutaneously and slightly above the pubic tubercle. Contents of this hernia then follow the tract of the testicle down into the scrotal sac...

Direct hernia
A direct inguinal hernia usually occurs due to a defect or weakness in the transversalis fascia area of the Hesselbach triangle. The triangle is defined inferiorly by the inguinal ligament, laterally by the inferior epigastric arteries, and medially by the conjoined tendon

Femoral hernia
The femoral hernia follows the tract below the inguinal ligament through the femoral canal. The canal lies medial to the femoral vein and lateral to the lacunar (Gimbernat) ligament. Because femoral hernias protrude through such a small defined space, they frequently become incarcerated or strangulated.[6]

Umbilical hernia
The umbilical hernia occurs through the umbilical fibromuscular ring, which usually obliterates by 2 years of age. They are congenital in origin and are repaired if they persist in children older than age 2-4 years..

Richter hernia
The Richter hernia occurs when only the antimesenteric border of the bowel herniates through the fascial defect. The Richter hernia involves only a portion of the circumference of the bowel. As such, the bowel may not be obstructed, even if the hernia is incarcerated or strangulated, and the patient may not present with vomiting. The Richter hernia can occur with any of the various abdominal hernias and is particularly dangerous, as a portion of strangulated bowel may be reduced unknowingly into the abdominal cavity, leading to perforation and peritonitis..

Incisional hernia
This iatrogenic hernia occurs in 2-10% of all abdominal operations secondary to breakdown of the fascial closure of prior surgery. Even after repair, recurrence rates approach 20-45%.

Spigelian hernia
This rare form of abdominal wall hernia occurs through a defect in the spigelian fascia, which is defined by the lateral edge of the rectus muscle at the semilunar line (costal arch to the pubic tubercle).

Obturator hernia
This hernia passes through the obturator foramen, following the path of the obturator nerves and muscles. Obturator hernias occur with a female-to-male ratio of 6:1, because of a gender-specific larger canal diameter. Because of its anatomic position, this hernia presents more commonly as a bowel obstruction than as a protrusion of bowel contents..

Types of Hernia - Condition


Reducible hernia: This term refers to the ability to return the contents of the hernia into the abdominal cavity, either spontaneously or manually. Incarcerated hernia: An incarcerated hernia is no longer reducible. The vascular supply of the bowel is not compromised. Bowel obstruction is common. Strangulated hernia: A strangulated hernia occurs when the vascular supply of the bowel is compromised secondary to incarceration of hernia contents.

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