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Query: UMLS:C0019270 (hernia)
15,856 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The value of herniography was reviewed in 45 patients with a variety of urological symptoms (4 with flank pain, 20 with pain from the funicle or scrotum, 11 with symptoms simulating prostatitis and 10 with ill-defined symptoms from the small pelvis). In no patient was a groin hernia palpable at physical examination. However, herniography revealed an inguinal hernia in 6 patients who underwent herniorrhaphy, whereafter 5 became asymptomatic. We recommend herniography in patients with long-standing obscure groin pain to reveal the presence of a nonpalpable inguinal hernia.
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PMID:Inguinal hernia in urological patients: the value of herniography. 337 96

The cause of severe and persistent neuralgia after hernia surgery is due to sensory nerve crushing. An operative technique has been described that prevents inadvertent crushing or division of the sensory nerves to the groin. With persistent postoperative pain, the offending nerve is usually difficult to identify. A protocol has been suggested to differentiate ilioinguinal from genitocrural causalgia. When the particular nerve is incriminated, its division will ordinarily cure the problem.
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PMID:Cause and prevention of postherniorrhaphy neuralgia: a proposed protocol for treatment. 337 20

Obturator hernias are relatively rare. In the past 15 years at the Mayo Clinic, eight patients underwent nine operations for repair of 11 obturator hernias, which represented 0.073 per cent (11 of 15,098) of all hernias repaired at this institution. Elderly women with chronic disease were most frequently affected. Symptoms were usually intermittent; mechanical small intestinal obstruction was the most common presenting condition, followed by pain in the thigh or groin area. The Howship-Romberg sign was found in only two patients, and a correct preoperative diagnosis was made in only one patient. Midline abdominal incisions were made in all patients. Incarcerated ileum was the most frequently encountered organ in the hernia sac. Surprisingly, foci of endometriosis in the obturator defect accounted for symptoms in two patients with three obturator hernias. Right-sided obturator hernias outnumbered left, and bilateral obturator hernias were found synchronously in two instances and metachronously in one instance. The often debilitated state of the patients with obturator hernia and the frequent delay of diagnosis combined to produce significant operative morbidity and mortality rates.
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PMID:Obturator hernia. 341 51

The results of cholecystectomy in terms of symptomatic improvement were prospectively evaluated in 124 unselected gall stone patients interviewed before and two years after elective surgery. Indications for cholecystectomy were biliary pain (n = 65), previous complications of gall stone disease (n = 52), and flatulent dyspepsia (n = 7). At two years 93 patients could be re-evaluated, of whom only 49 (53%) were completely symptom free. Postcholecystectomy symptoms occurring in the remaining 44 patients were mainly flatulent dyspepsia (which had relapsed in 22 of 46 patients who suffered it preoperatively), dull abdominal pain or diarrhoea. Incisional hernia was present in five patients and one had recurrence of pain because of retained common bile duct stones. Symptomatic cures after cholecystectomy decreased with the duration of the preoperative history. The results reconfirm that cholecystectomy eradicates specific symptoms and complications of gall stone disease, but they also show that nearly one half of operated patients are dissatisfied with the procedure because of mild but distressing 'postcholecystectomy' symptoms. These are probably caused by previously undiagnosed functional gut disease associated with, but unrelated to, gall stones. A systemic approach to multisymptomatic patients with gall stones is recommended.
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PMID:Postcholecystectomy symptoms. A prospective study of gall stone patients before and two years after surgery. 342 78

Diffuse esophageal spasm (DES) is a rare disease, and its surgical management is controversial. There are seven major reported series totaling 148 patients and six operative variations depending on the extent of myotomy and whether or not a hernia repair should be added. There are no five-year follow-up reports. In the present study of 34 patients followed for at least five years, all had a myotomy from the apex of the chest through the high-pressure zone and all had a total fundoplication hernia repair, 16 with gastroplasty and 16 with a standard Nissen fundoplication. The length of the completion fundoplication is reduced to less than 0.5 cm to avoid problems of overcompetence. There were no operative deaths. Follow-up is 100% by clinical history, 82.4% by radiology, and 61.8% by manometry. Radiological follow-up showed no recurrence or reflux, although 1 patient had esophageal mucus retention. Thirty patients (88.2%) are eating normally without dysphagia or spontaneous pain. Two patients (5.9%) have mild dysphagia, and 1 of them also has mild spontaneous pain. One patient has major residual dysphagia, which is being treated conservatively, and 1 has required colon interposition. Good-quality results have been achieved in 94% of patients now followed 5 to 10.7 years.
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PMID:Extended esophageal myotomy and short total fundoplication hernia repair in diffuse esophageal spasm: five-year review in 34 patients. 354 14

Postoperative pain is a major problem following surgery in the ambulatory child. A study was undertaken to test the effect of intraoperative bupivacaine on postoperative pain in children undergoing outpatient hernia repair. Ninety-nine children aged 1 to 7 years underwent outpatient inguinal herniorrhaphy under general anesthesia. Each was randomly assigned to receive bupivacaine (group 1) or saline (group 2), infiltrating the ilioinguinal and iliohypogastric nerves. Drug administration and patient evaluation were double-blinded. The groups were similar with respect to age, sex, side of procedure, and length of operation. In the immediate postoperative period, 17 group 1 patients required analgesics compared with 39 in group 2 (P less than .01); total codeine dosage was lower in group 1 (4.0 +/- 7.1 mg v 11.8 +/- 10.5 mg, P less than .05). Activity level 45 minutes after surgery (using a standardized scale) was greater in group 1 (P less than .05). Acetaminophen requirements at home were lower in group 1 on the day of surgery (3.1 +/- 4.3 mL v 5.7 +/- 7.4 mL, P less than .05) and over the following 48 hours (1.5 +/- 3.4 mL v 4.9 +/- 10.7 mL, P less than .05). Activity level at home on the day of surgery did not differ significantly between groups, but activity level over the following 48 hours was higher in group 1 (P less than .05). The two groups were similar with respect to all other parameters. We conclude that intraoperative bupivacaine decreases post-operative pain and analgesic use, and promotes early ambulation in children undergoing hernia repair.
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PMID:Intraoperative bupivacaine during outpatient hernia repair in children: a randomized double blind trial. 355 31

In a 52 year old pyknic patient in whom very violent pain had suddenly occurred in the left lower abdomen, an acute hemorrhagic infarction of an epiploic appendix of the sigmoid colon with adhesion to the anterior abdominal wall was found to be the cause of the symptoms. A hernia, above all a hernia of the semilunar line of Spigelius, an inflammatory process and a granuloma had to be considered in the differential diagnosis.
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PMID:[Differential diagnosis of a hemorrhagic-necrotizing epiploic appendix]. 355 54

In 151 years since first described, there have been 112 reported cases of hernia through the foramen of Winslow (HFW). All thus far have described HFW as a primary entity. The case reported appears to be unique with HFW as a surgical complication. HFW is the least common of internal hernias. The primary symptom is pain referred from the herniated organ and the hepatoduodenal ligament. An interesting sign is that the patient is found curled up or stooped over for pain relief. Anatomic factors implicated in HFW are an enlarged epiploic foramen, a floppy cecum and ascending colon, or abnormal length of small bowel mesentery. Tension on these structures causes pain with the torso extended. Distention of bowel in the lesser sac mimics gastric obstruction. Organs herniated are: small bowel (63%); cecum, ascending colon, and terminal ileum (30%); and transverse colon (7%). Of 25 cases reported since 1966, cecal herniation comprised two-thirds. The diagnosis may be made radiologically and the treatment is surgical. The case and a review of the literature are presented with attention to the anatomy. Also provided are the signs and symptoms of this interesting and perplexing diagnosis.
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PMID:Hernia through the foramen of Winslow: a complication of cholecystectomy. A case report. 357 35

The authors have analyzed 200 clinical cases of ischemic damage to the lower half of the spinal cord secondary to surgery-verified hernia of a lumbar intervertebral disk. In many patients the surgical findings, in addition to a compressed spinal radicle, included compression of an arterial or a venous vessel. Clinical characteristics were compared in patients with compression of the radiculo-medullar artery (n = 100) and of the large radicular vein (n = 100). Significant for the differential diagnosis are the rate of myeloischemia evolution, characteristics and the time-course of the pain syndrome, the composition of the cerebrospinal fluid and the topography of ischemia in the transverse section of the spinal cord. The necessity of differentiating between arterial and venous radiculomyeloischemia is dictated by the advisability of the inclusion into the therapeutic complex of special vasoactive drugs (improving the arterial blood flow) or venotonics. Indications for the surgical treatment of such patients are presented.
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PMID:[Differential diagnosis of arterial and venous spondylogenic lumbosacral radiculomyeloischemia]. 359 Nov 30

Eighteen patients (28 compartments) with chronic exertional compartment syndrome and 14 normal asymptomatic volunteers (18 compartments) were studied. Evaluation included clinical assessment followed by quantitative determination of intracompartmental pressures as monitored by wick or slit catheters before and after exercise. Intramuscular pressures measuring greater than or equal to 10 mmHg at rest and/or greater than or equal to 25 mmHg five minutes after exercise were defined as abnormally elevated. The patients with chronic compartment syndrome described reproducible exertional anterolateral leg pain, and 39% of these patients had a fascial hernia. Such a defect was present in less than five percent of the normal volunteers. Nonsurgical treatment was selected by five patients and all five reported persistent inability to participate in athletics because of their exertional pain. Of the remaining 13 patients, 12 were treated by decompressive fasciotomy and 11 of the 12 (92%) had pain relief and increased exercise tolerance. A single patient had had fascial closure instead of fasciotomy, and this procedure produced an acute compartment syndrome. Effective treatment of the chronic compartment syndrome consists of reduction of exertional activities or surgical decompression by fasciotomy.
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PMID:Management of chronic exertional anterior compartment syndrome of the lower extremity. 359 93


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