Inguinal hernia
Inguinal hernia refers to herniation of intraabdominal contents into the inguinal region. It is the most common type of hernia and is mostly a disorder of older men. There are two types, indirect and direct.
Types
In indirect inguinal hernia, the contents herniate into the inguinal canal through the deep inguinal ring. The hernial sac lies within the spermatic cord.
In direct inguinal hernia, the contents herniate directly through the posterior wall of the inguinal canal. The hernial sac lies outside the spermatic cord.
During surgery, the two types of inguinal hernia can be differentiated by observing the hernia’s relation to the inferior epigastric vessels. Indirect hernia lies laterally to the vessel, while direct hernia lies medially.
Treatment
Surgical treatment for inguinal hernia may be with tension (Bassini or Shouldice operation) or tension-free with mesh repair (Lichtenstein or laparoscopy).
In Lichtenstein repair, a synthetic mesh is placed between the transversalis fascia and the external oblique aponeurosis during open surgery to reinforce the posterior wall of the inguinal canal. With laparoscopy, transabdominal preperitoneal repair (TAPP) or total extraperitoneal repair (TEP) are options to place the fascia. With TAPP the mesh is placed preperitoneally. With TEP the mesh is placed is an extraperitoneal position, outside the peritoneum.
Recurrence is more common with tension repair, and so tension-free repair is preferred with mesh is usually preferred. If the risk of infection is high (nearby infection, bowel injury), the hernia is very small, or the patient is very young, mesh repair is not preferred.