Lecture 8 - UMF IASI 2015
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Transcript Lecture 8 - UMF IASI 2015
Hernias of the anterolateral wall of the
abdomen
-particular forms-
Inguinal hernias
Anatomy briefing
Definition: hernias produced through a defect
situated on the posterior wall of the inguinal
canal
Inguinal canal: a space designed for the passage
of
– Testis – peritoneal diverticula present at birth
– Round ligament – peritoneal diverticula present at
birth (Nuck)
Major opening in the mucsculo-fascial structure
of the abdominal wall
Inguinal canal
Inguinal canal - structure
Anatomic structures are dynamic –
description represents a schematic view
– 4 walls (anterior, posterior, superior and
inferior)
– 2 orifices: internal and external
Anterior wall
Fascia of the
external oblique
muscle
Fascia ends in 2
pillars
– Spina pubis
– Anterior part of
pubic bone and
rectus sheat
Inferior wall
Inguinal ligament
Concavity opened above
Internally – it reflects fibers towards the
pectineal ridge = the triangular ligament of
Gimbernat and prolonges on the pubic
branch of the iliac bone forming one body
with the ligament of Cooper – solid
strutcture
Inferior wall
Superior wall
Inferior border of internal oblique and
transversus : the conjoined ligament
Fusion of the structures is NOT the rule
The resultant structure is not fibrotic and
sometimes very friable – not suitable for
suturing
Posterior wall
Fascia transversalis
in it’s way towards
the vascular sheat
Ligament of
Thompson
(inferiorly)
2 fibrotic structures
ligaments of Henle
and Hasselbach
Posterior wall
Weak anatomic region predisposed to hernia
formation
Muscular structures are supposed to close the
defect during effort
Inferior eipgastric vessels separate 3 parts
– Profound inguinal orifice (external oblique hernia)
– Middle part (medial to the epigastric vessels)– direct
inguinal hernia
– Internal part (medial to the umbilical artery) inetrnal
oblique hernia
Orifices
Profund (lateral or internal)
– Situated in fascia transversalis – the external part
– A weak point of the abdominal wall
Superficial (medial or external)
– Between the pillars of the fascia of the external
oblique muscle
– The place where a hernia engages towards the scrotum
– Place to introduce finger for palpation
Content of the inguinal canal
Women: round ligament + vessels
Men: spermatic cord
– cremaster
– vas deferens
– spermatic artery
– deferntial artery
– 2 venous plexuses
– Nervous branches (ilio-hipogastric, ilioininguinal,
genital)
Shall we all develop hernia?
There is a content passing from the
abdomen to scrotum
BUT
– The trajectory is oblique through muscles and
during effort the structures are compressed
together
– Oblique muscles work as a curtain and close
the defect
– Internal orrifice is strangulate during effort
External oblique inguinal hernia
Congenital: persistentce of the peritoneal
diverticula through which the testis
migrated in scrotum. Frequently associated
with abnormal migration of the testis.
– Complete form with totaland free
comunication from the peritoneum till scrotum
– Incomplete forms – vaginala testicularis is
separeted +/- hydrocele or cystic remnants in
the spermatic cord.
External oblique inguinal hernia
Acuired : migration of
the peritoneal sac
– Herniation point
– Interstitial hernia
– Inguino-pubic hernia
– Inguino-scrotal henria
Clinical signs
Common signs for all hernia
Digital exploration through the superficial
orifice
– Evaluation of the defect
– Relations with the epigastric vessels = variety
of hernia
Differential diagnosis
Uncomplicated interstitial hernia
– Ectopic testis
– Cysts of the spermatic cord
– Solid tumors
Uncomplicated inguino-pubic hernia
– Crural hernia (line of Malgagine)
– Lypoma of labia major
– Cyst of the Nuck canal
Inguino-scrotal hernia
– Hydrocel
– Varicocel
– Testicular tumors
Direct inguinal hernia
A weak point hernia
The area of weakness is the middle
inguinal area (between the epigastric artery
and remnant of the umbilical artery)
Sac is completely separated from the
spermatic cord which is pushed away
Particularities
Frequently in older people, associated with
other hernias
Frequently bilateral
Generally small and do not descend in the
scrotum, trajectory being perpendicular on
the inguinal ligament.
Defect is large – unlikely to produce
comlications
Differential diagnostic
Mostly with the external oblique hernia
Age
Location
Form
Trajectory
Scrotum
Muscular tonus
Epigastric arte.
Complications
Oblique
Direct
Any
Uni/bilateral
Pear shape
Oblique
Yes
Normal
Internal
Frequent
Old
Bilateral 50%
Hemispheric
Perpendicular
No
Weak
External
Rare
Treatment of Inguinal Hernia
Objectives:
– Resection of the hernia sac
– Treatment of the defect – a solid wall to
prevent hernia recurrence
LARGE VARIETY OF TECHNIQUES
Operative principles
Incision of superficial
structures and isolation of
spermatic cord.
Isolate the hernia sac
and the structure
migrated with the
peritoneal layer
(lipomas)
Open the hernia
sac
Control de content
Resction of the sac
and suture the
peritoneal defect
Posterior wall repair
GOAL – prevent recurrences
“Anatomical” procedures
– Behind the spermatic cord (Bassini, Shouldice,
McVay)
– In front of the spermatic cord (Kimbarowski, Forgue)
Procedures that use a synthetic structure (mesh
repair) – respect the principle of tension-free
repair.
Behind the cord repair procedures
Mesh repair
Laparoscopic mesh repair
Orthopedic treatment
ONLY when the
patient refuses
operations or major
contraindication for
surgical repair
Femoral hernia
Through the femoral ring in the triangle of
Scarpa
Femoral ring:
–
–
–
–
Inguinal ligament (ant)
pectineal fascia and ligament of Coopper (post)
lig Gimbernat (internal)
ileo-pectineal ligament (ext)
Anatomy
Variants
– Herniation point – incomplete (under the cribriform
fascia) – complete
Prevascular, retrovascular, external
Laugier (through the fibers of the ligament of
Gimbernat)
Femuro-pectineal (under the pectineal fascia)
Multi-divericular
In combination with inguinal hernia – distension
of the groin
Higher incidence in women
4x more frequent in women
Diameter of the pelvic girdle is larger
Accentuated lordosis in lumbar area
Pregnancies: weakens the abdominal wall
+ sustained increase in intraabdominal
pressure
Pathological particularities
Small sac, pear-like, well delimitated
neck which is fibrotic
DIFFERENCES from other hernia:
multiple layers like the onion skins
(skin, subcutaneous tissue, cribriform
fascia, properitoneal tissue, fascia
transversalis)
Content: any organ, including caecum,
apendix, colon, urinary baldder)
Major risk for complications,
especially the strangulation – lateral
pinch
Clinical signs - particularities
Few or no functional signs: little pain or
heaviness in the groin or during extension
of the hip.
+/- digestive symptoms (colicky pain,
urinary symptoms) more often believed to
have another source
TYPICALLY the signs indicate and
abdominal suffering and the physician does
not explore the groin
Clinical examination
Small pseudo-tumor in the Scarpa triangle ,
most typical medial to the femoral vessels.
INCONSTANT
Round or oval shape
Prolonged under the inguinal ligament – if
the tumor can be felt
Frequently obese patients with lare
subcutaneous fat layer
Clinical examination
Consistency is elastic or granular – atypical
for a hernia
IREDUCIBLE but not associated with a
loud symptomatology in the groin
IMPULSION AND EXPANSION are
either absent or faint
High percentage are complicated at
presentation
Differential diagnosis
REDUCIBLE:
– Inguinal hernia (line
of Malgaigne)
– Varicose vein
– Aneurism of the
superficial femoral
artery
– Tuberculous (cold)
abscess migrated in
the Scarpa triangle
Differential diagnosis
IREDUCIBLE:
– Strangulated inguinal
–
–
–
–
–
–
hernia
Cyst of the canal of
Nuck
Ectopic testis
Lypoma
Lymphnode
enlargement
Venous thrombosis
Hematoma
Treatment
Principles same with all hernia
Access:
– femoral
– inguino-femoral
– inguinal
Parietal reconstruction:
– Closing the femroal ring by
suturing the inguinal ligament to
Cooper ligament and pectineal
fascia
– Suturing the conjoined tendon to
Cooper ligament
– Mesh prosthesis
Umbilical hernia
A. Congenital
Failure in the development of the
abdominal wall
– Embryonic form (defect appears before the 3rd
month and organs are not covered by
peritoneum – not real hernia
– Fetal form – covered by peritoneum
Pathology
Translucent covering (displastic wall)
without vessels and muscles
You can see abdominal viscera through the
wall. Content can be as much as the whole
abdominal content
Clinical aspects
Large ventral tumor, present at birth and
surrounded by a skin ring
Transparent wall: abdominal viscera
EVOLUTION: spontaneous rupture + death
TRATAMENT: surgical
- small defects: as in hernia
- large defects: skin flaps +/- serial operations
B. Umbilical hernias of the child
Causes:
– Weak umbilical scar
(infection, distension)
– High intraabdominal
pressure (crying,
coughing, fimosis, etc
Pathology:
– Small sac with a large
neck, little chances of
strangulation
Treatment
Conservative: if
– Less then 2 years
– Less then 2 cm diameter
• Has to be maintained reduced via a skin fold until
spontaneous closure
Surgical:
– Resection of the sac
– Parietal repair
C. Umbilical hernias of the adult
Weak point
Obese women,
multiple pregnancies,
chronic peritoneal
dyalisis, ascites.
Particularities
Direct herniation most typically (indirect
machanism is possible if the ring is
asymmetrically positioned)
Sac initially small may become
multidiverticular + changes generated by
the degenration of the sac by expnasion
Rigid neck – strangulation factor
Content: most frequent properitoneal fat,
but viscus can migrate as well
Clinical signs
Pain on effort +/- digestive symptoms
Typical signs of hernia with a major
tendency to become irreducible
If palpation of the ring is possible – large,
round, rigid defect
Complications
Strangulation (rigid ring, with rapid
progression to necrosis)
Progressive enlargement – irreducible and
loosing the right to stay in the abdominal
cavity
Treatment
Surgical:
– Omfalectomy and treatment of hernia
– Techniques that conserve the umbilical scar
(subcutaneous dissection)
– Plastic surgery
Epigastric hernias
Particularities
Supraumbilical median line
Frequent multiple hernias
At the crossing of fibers in the linea alba
Small, irreducible and containing mostly
properitoneal fat
One particular form – diastases of the
rectus sheat
Symptomatic hernia require treatment
Ventro-lateral hernia
Spiegel
Particularities
Anatomic: defect in the ventro-lateral
abdominal wall where vessels pass
subctaneous. (lateral to the rectus sheat)
Hernia pushes the fascia of the external
oblique muscle (interstitial form) or
overpasses is (complete form)
Particularities
Clinical: pain + abdominal deformity
Dg: in interstitial forms sometimes no
signs. Positive dg by US scan
Rsik of becoming irreducible or
strangulated
Surgical treatment like any hernia
UNUSUAL HERNIA
Lumbar hernia
Pposterior wall (triangle of J.L. Petit – G.
oblique, G. dorsal, iliac bone) or Grynfeld
qudrate space (C12 with small dentate
muscle, paravertebral muscles, small
oblique and lumbar quadrat)
– extraperitoneal
– paraperitoneal
– peritoneal
Other forms
Obturator
Perineal
Hiatus
Internal
Ischiatic
Postoperative hernia
Generalities
HERNIAS = peritoneal diverticulum
under the skin + defect developed
postraumatic
EVISCERATIONS = posttraumatic wall
defect without a peritoneal covering
Ethiology
Posttraumatic or postoperative
Causes that favor postoperative hernia
Old age – scaring abnormalities
Co-morbidities (liver cirrhosis, cancer diabetes)
Obesity
Type of incision
Postoperative infection
Increased intraabdominal pressure developed
postoperative
– Not adequate suture material
–
–
–
–
–
–
Pathology
Abdominal wall defect – variable in
diameter, frequently multiple, situated
under the skin scar
Hernia sac: thickened peritoneum,
multidiverticular, frequently under the skin
in contact with it
Visceral content
Clinical examination
Pseudo-tumor with all characters of hernia
Related with the scar
Diemension and number of parietal defects
Reducible or irreducible
Skin overlaying the hernia
Treatment
Evisceration: urgent, viscus should be
placed back in the abdomen and skin
should be closed
Postoperative hernia: complex treatment
preferably elective