Inguinal and femoral hernias (mechanism of disease)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • This is a flowchart on inguinal and femoral hernias, covering the etiology, pathophysiology, and manifestations.
    ADDITIONAL TAGS:
    Risk factors / SDOH
    Cell / tissue damage
    Structural factors
    Inguinal and femoral hernias
    Medicine / iatrogenic
    Infectious / microbial
    Biochem / metabolic
    Immunology / inflammation
    Signs / symptoms
    Tests / imaging / labs
    Environmental, toxin
    Embryology / development
    Pressure / flow physiology
    Pathophysiology
    Etiology
    Manifestations
    Dennis M. DePace, PhD - CC BY-SA 4.0، commons.wikime...
    Usually older men
    Protrusion of abdominal contents (intraperitoneal fat, mesentery, bowels) …
    Hesselbach (inguinal) △ borders:
    Medially: rectus abdominis muscle
    Laterally: inferior epigastric vessels
    Inferiorly: inguinal ligament
    Femoral canal boundaries:
    Anterior: inguinal ligament
    Posterior: pubic ramus, pectineal lig
    Medial: lacunar ligament
    Lateral: femoral vein
    Medial to the inferior epigastric blood vessels (within Hesselbach triangle) and lateral to the rectus abdominis: direct inguinal hernia
    Lateral to the inferior epigastric blood vessels (outside Hesselbach triangle): indirect hernia
    Into the femoral canal through the femoral ring: femoral hernia
    Male infants, older men
    Typically acquired
    Weakening of the transversalis fascia
    ↑ intraabdominal pressure
    Skeletal muscle and connective tissue weakness
    Long term steroid use
    COPD with chronic cough
    Constipation
    Typically congenital
    incomplete obliteration of processus vaginalis
    Outpouching of the parietal peritoneum that extends through the inguinal canal; normally obliterated by birth
    May not become apparent until adulthood despite being present since birth.
    Female, advancing age
    Multiparity
    Previous abdominal surgery (such as for prior hernias)
    ↑ intraabdominal pressure
    Constipation
    Straining for micturition
    COPD + cough
    Obesity
    BPH in men
    Mass / swelling in respective region; reducible and soft
    Enlarges with cough, strain, Valsalva; smaller when supine
    Uncomplicated hernia
    Irreducible (cannot be pushed back into abd); but skin overlying the hernia is normal
    Incarcerated hernia
    Contents trapped in hernia sac
    Restriction of blood supply → ischemia, necrosis)
    Irreducible +/- severe sudden groin pain; +/- bowel obstruction; +/- warm, red, tender exfoliated, blistered skin
    Strangulated hernia

Komentáře • 3