The pediatric inguinal hernia: is contralateral exploration justified?
Bol. Asoc. Méd. P. R
; 87(1/2): 8-11, Jan.-Feb. 1995.
Article
in En
| LILACS
| ID: lil-411578
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ABSTRACT
To determine if contralateral inguinal hernia exploration is justified we decided to study our experience with 161 consecutive cases who underwent bilateral repair during a 30 months period. 61 of the population were infants younger than two years of age, and 19 premature babies. 69 pts presented with an RIH, 47 with an LIH and 45 pts with BIH. 16 suffered an episode of preoperative incarceration which were all reduced satisfactorily and operated promptly. A positive contralateral finding (either a hernial sac or a patent processus vaginalis) was identified in 74 RIH and 72 LIH patients upon exploration. No incidence of testicular edema/atrophy, vas deferens injury, or recurrence was reported in the six-year follow-up of the study. Statistical analysis of the contralateral findings during surgery with sex, gestational age and age at operation showed that females and infants younger than two months of age had a higher probability of having positive findings. We could not show that prematurity or left-sided hernias were associated with a higher positive contralateral rate. The major benefit of contralateral exploration is based on the fact that it allows discovery and elimination of a patent processus vaginalis so a hernia cannot develop subsequently. We conclude by establishing certain criteria that justifies the routine contralateral exploration of the pediatric hernia the surgeon should be experienced in child care, associated conditions should not increase the surgical risks significantly, time-consuming dissections of the cord structures should be discouraged, and the operating time should be kept to a minimum
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Index:
LILACS
Main subject:
Hernia, Inguinal
Type of study:
Prognostic_studies
Limits:
Child
/
Child, preschool
/
Female
/
Humans
/
Infant
/
Male
/
Newborn
Language:
En
Journal:
Bol. Asoc. Méd. P. R
Journal subject:
MEDICINA
Year:
1995
Type:
Article