Hernia by teachers@tatvakrishna

December 27, 2025by Tatva Krishna

HERNIA

Definition

Hernia is the protrusion of a viscus or part of a viscus through an abnormal opening in the wall of the cavity that normally contains it, covered by peritoneum (except some types).

Components of Hernia

1. Hernial Orifice – Defect/opening

2. Hernial Sac – Neck, Body, Fundus

3. Contents

  1. Omentum (most common)
  2. Small intestine
  3. Colon, appendix, bladder, ovary (rare)

Classification of Hernia

I. According to Etiology

1. Congenital

  • Indirect inguinal hernia
  • Umbilical hernia (children)

2. Acquired

  • Direct inguinal
  • Femoral
  • Incisional

II. According to Anatomical Site

A. Groin Hernias

1. Inguinal Hernia (most common – ~75%)

  • Indirect
  • Direct

2. Femoral Hernia

  • More common in females
  • High risk of strangulation

B. Ventral Hernias

  • Umbilical
  • Paraumbilical
  • Epigastric
  • Incisional

C. Others

  • Hiatus hernia
  • Obturator hernia
  • Lumbar hernia
  • Spigelian hernia

Inguinal Hernia 

  1. Indirect Inguinal Hernia
  • Congenital (patent processus vaginalis)
  • Passes lateral to inferior epigastric vessels
  • Enters deep inguinal ring
  • Can reach scrotum

2. Direct Inguinal Hernia

  • Acquired (weak posterior wall)
  • Passes medial to inferior epigastric vessels
  • Through Hesselbach’s triangle
  • Rarely enters scrotum
  • Hesselbach’s Triangle
  • Medial: Lateral border of rectus abdominis
  • Lateral: Inferior epigastric vessels
  • Inferior: Inguinal ligament

Types According to Reducibility

1. Reducible Hernia

2. Irreducible (Incarcerated)

3. Obstructed Hernia – Lumen blocked, blood supply intact

4. Strangulated Hernia – Blood supply compromised → gangrene

5. Richter’s Hernia – Only part of bowel wall involved

6. Maydl’s Hernia – “W-shaped” loop → high mortality

7. Sliding Hernia – Sac wall formed by viscus (colon, bladder)

Clinical Features

Symptoms

  • Groin/abdominal swelling
  • Increases on coughing/straining
  • Dull aching pain
  • Dragging sensation

Signs

  • Expansile cough impulse
  • Reducibility
  • Location above/below pubic tubercle
  • Scrotal extension

Complications

  • Intestinal obstruction
  • Strangulation
  • Gangrene
  • Perforation
  • Peritonitis

Diagnosis

  • Clinical diagnosis is gold standard
  • Inspection
  • Palpation
  • Cough impulse test
  • Ring occlusion test

Investigations (when needed)

  • USG abdomen/groin
  • CT scan (obese / recurrent / occult hernia

Management of Hernia

General Principle

> All hernias should be repaired surgically unless contraindicated

Surgical Options

1. Open Repair – Herniotomy (children)

  • Herniorrhaphy
  • Hernioplasty (mesh repair)
  • Common techniques – Bassini, Shouldice, Lichtenstein tension-free repair (gold standard)

2. Laparoscopic Repair

  • TEP (Totally Extraperitoneal)
  • TAPP (Transabdominal Preperitoneal)

Advantages

  • Less pain
  • Early recovery
  • Bilateral hernia in same sitting

Emergency Hernia Surgery

Indications:

  • Strangulated hernia
  • Obstructed hernia
  • Principles:
  • Assess bowel viability
  • Resection if gangrenous
  • Mesh usually avoided in contaminated field

Special Hernias

Femoral Hernia

  • Below & lateral to pubic tubercle
  • Narrow neck → strangulation common

Richter’s Hernia

  • No intestinal obstruction
  • High risk of gangrene

Sliding Hernia

  • Never open sac blindly

Ayurveda Correlation  – Hernia ≈ Antravriddhi / Vata Vyadhi

Vata prakopa

Dhamani shaithilya

Management:

  • Vata-shamana
  • Bandhana
  • Panchakarma (selected cases)
  • Surgery (Shalya Tantra)

Key Exam Pearls

  • Most common hernia: Inguinal
  • Most common strangulated hernia: Femoral
  • Gold standard repair: Lichtenstein
  • Hernia in children → Herniotomy only