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Inguinal Hernia and Hydrocele

Inguinal Hernia and Hydrocele

Inguinal Hernia and Hydrocele

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Embryology & Anatomy - Groin's Groundwork

Processus vaginalis development and inguinal canal

  • Processus Vaginalis (PV): Peritoneal outpouching preceding gonadal descent.
    • Guides testes (♂) / round ligament (♀) through inguinal canal.
    • Normally obliterates from deep inguinal ring downwards before birth or in early infancy.
    • Distal remnant forms tunica vaginalis around testis.
  • Patent Processus Vaginalis (PPV): The fundamental cause of pediatric inguinal hernias and communicating hydroceles due to failed obliteration.
  • Inguinal Canal: Oblique, ~4 cm passage in lower anterior abdominal wall.
    • Deep (Internal) Ring: Opening in transversalis fascia.
    • Superficial (External) Ring: Opening in external oblique aponeurosis.
    • Contents: Spermatic cord (♂) or round ligament (♀); ilioinguinal nerve.

⭐ Persistence of the processus vaginalis is more common on the right side, correlating with the slightly later descent of the right testis an_exam-favourite_fact

Pediatric Inguinal Hernia - The Protrusion Problem

  • Pathophysiology: Protrusion of abdominal contents (bowel, omentum; ovary/tube in females) via a patent processus vaginalis (PPV). Almost always indirect.

  • Epidemiology: ↑ in premature infants (up to 30%), males (M:F 6:1), right-sided (R>L).

  • Clinical Features:

    • Intermittent inguinal/inguinoscrotal swelling, ↑ with crying/straining. Usually reducible.
    • "Silk glove sign": thickened cord.
    • Incarceration: Painful, irreducible swelling.
    • Strangulation: Tender, erythematous, warm swelling; systemic signs (vomiting, fever).
  • Diagnosis: Clinical. Transillumination negative (if bowel). Ultrasound if uncertain.

  • Management:

    • Elective herniotomy soon after diagnosis.
    • Incarcerated: Attempt reduction (Trendelenburg, sedation). If successful, surgery in 24-48 hrs. If fails, emergency surgery.
    • Strangulated: Resuscitation & emergency surgery.

    Anatomy of the inguinal canal

    ⭐ The risk of incarceration is highest in the first 6 months of life, making prompt diagnosis and elective repair crucial.

Pediatric Hydrocele - Fluid Fiasco

Painless scrotal fluid collection; peritoneal fluid in tunica vaginalis via patent processus vaginalis (PPV).

  • Types:
    • Communicating: PPV patent, size varies.
    • Non-communicating: PPV obliterated, fluid trapped.
    • Hydrocele of cord: Fluid in cord segment.
  • Clinical Features:
    • Painless scrotal swelling.
    • Brilliant transillumination.
    • Communicating: Fluctuates (↑ with strain). Silk glove sign.
    • Non-communicating: Constant size.
  • Management:
    • Observation: Most resolve spontaneously by 12-18 months (up to 2 years).
    • Surgical repair (high ligation of PPV) if:
      • Persists > 12-18 months.
      • Associated hernia suspected.
      • Large, tense, or symptomatic.

⭐ Most congenital hydroceles resolve spontaneously by 1-2 years; observation is key.

Infant hydrocele transillumination

Differential Diagnosis - Swelling Sleuth

ConditionKey Differentiators
Inguinal HerniaReducible (usually), cough impulse (+), may extend to scrotum, transillumination (-) if bowel
HydroceleIrreducible, cough impulse (-), confined to scrotum/cord, transillumination (+)
Undescended TestisEmpty scrotum, testis palpable in inguinal canal or abdomen, not a true swelling
Testicular TorsionAcute pain, tender, high-riding testis, absent cremasteric reflex, surgical emergency
Epididymo-orchitisPain, fever, scrotal inflammation, Prehn's sign (+), pyuria
LymphadenopathyFirm, discrete, multiple swellings possible, often history of local infection
Varicocele"Bag of worms" feel, more common in older boys, usually left-sided
Encysted Hydrocele of CordSmooth, tense, fluctuant swelling in inguinal canal/upper scrotum, distinct from testis

⭐ In infants, a communicating hydrocele often resolves spontaneously by 12-18 months as the processus vaginalis obliterates. Persistent hydroceles beyond this age may require surgical intervention, similar to inguinal hernias, due to the patent processus vaginalis (PPV).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Indirect inguinal hernias (most common) stem from a patent processus vaginalis (PPV).
  • More common in males, premature infants, and on the right side.
  • Incarceration risk is high in infants < 1 year; requires prompt herniotomy.
  • Communicating hydroceles (PPV) often resolve by 1-2 years; surgery if persistent.
  • Herniotomy (high sac ligation) is the standard treatment for hernias.
  • Silk glove sign suggests hernia; transillumination differentiates hydrocele from hernia_

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