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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (
hernia
)
15,856
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inguinal hernia sometimes surprises surgeons with its unexpected content.
Epiploic appendagitis
in
hernia
sac is a very rare entity. We report a 60-year-old male patient with a painless inguinal mass. Surgical exploration showed a 4-cm mass beneath the external oblique aponeurosis that consisted of a
hernia
sac containing an inflamed and remarkably swollen appendix epiploica of the sigmoid colon secondary to torsion. The patient recovered after the resection of epiploic appendix and a tension-free
hernia
repair.
Hernia
2005 Oct
PMID:Epiploic appendicitis in inguinal hernia sac presenting an inguinal mass. 1645 81
Epiploic appendagitis
is a rare cause of acute abdominal pain, determined by a benign self-limiting inflammation of the epiploic appendages. It may manifest with heterogeneous clinical presentations, mimicking other more severe entities responsible of acute abdominal pain, such as acute diverticulitis or appendicitis. Given its importance as clinical mimicker, imaging plays a crucial role to avoid inaccurate diagnosis that may lead to unnecessary hospitalization, antibiotic therapy, and surgery. CT represents the gold standard technique for the evaluation of patients with indeterminate acute abdominal pain. Imaging findings include the presence of an oval lesion with fat-attenuation surrounded by a thin hyperdense rim on CT ("hyperattenuating ring sign") abutting anteriorly the large bowel, usually associated with inflammation of the adjacent mesentery. A central high-attenuation focus within the fatty lesion ("central dot sign") can sometimes be observed and is indicative of a central thrombosed vein within the inflamed epiploic appendage. Rarely, epiploic appendagitis may be located within a
hernia
sac or attached to the vermiform appendix. Chronically infarcted epiploic appendage may detach, appearing as an intraperitoneal loose calcified body in the abdominal cavity. In this review, we aim to provide an overview of the clinical presentation and key imaging features that may help the radiologist to make an accurate diagnosis and guide the clinical management of those patients.
...
PMID:CT imaging findings of epiploic appendagitis: an unusual cause of abdominal pain. 3079 45