The demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s review

Abstract Background Inguinal hernia in neonates and infants including children is as a result of failure of processes vaginalis to close. Once diagnosed, it should be promptly repaired on elective basis to prevent possible risk of bowel incarceration. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the cl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jayalaxmi Shripati Aihole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-08-01
Series:African Journal of Urology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12301-020-00037-6
id doaj-b81bcec9941a4310bfa72e5fe27c51a0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b81bcec9941a4310bfa72e5fe27c51a02020-11-25T03:44:40ZengSpringerOpenAfrican Journal of Urology1110-57041961-99872020-08-012611810.1186/s12301-020-00037-6The demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s reviewJayalaxmi Shripati Aihole0Department of Paediatric SurgeryAbstract Background Inguinal hernia in neonates and infants including children is as a result of failure of processes vaginalis to close. Once diagnosed, it should be promptly repaired on elective basis to prevent possible risk of bowel incarceration. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the clinical profile, management, and outcome of infantile inguinal hernia. Methods Aim of this prospective clinical study was to clinically evaluate the infants with clinical diagnosis of inguinal hernia admitted in our tertiary child care institute from January 2014 to December 2017 over a period of three years. The design of this study was to assess the clinical profile, management and outcome of infantile inguinal hernia. Study was conducted in a tertiary care neonatal and paediatric referral centre in southern India. Infants less than 1 year including neonates were selected for this study on the basis of inclusion and exclusion criteria. The maximum follow-up period was 5 years. Results A total of 118 infants admitted with clinical diagnosis of inguinal hernia were included in the present study. They were grouped as per their clinical diagnosis and age on admission into two groups; 0 to 6 months as group I and more than 6 months to 12 months as group II. All of them underwent surgical repair as soon as diagnosed. Overall survival rate was 100%. There was no operative mortality 0/118 (0%). Rate of recurrence was 0.034% without any surgical site infections. Conclusion Early surgical intervention in the form of inguinal herniotomy is the most appropriate management of inguinal hernia in infants including the neonates as soon as diagnosed on elective basis.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12301-020-00037-6Inguinal herniaNeonatesProcessus vaginalisHerniotomy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jayalaxmi Shripati Aihole
spellingShingle Jayalaxmi Shripati Aihole
The demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s review
African Journal of Urology
Inguinal hernia
Neonates
Processus vaginalis
Herniotomy
author_facet Jayalaxmi Shripati Aihole
author_sort Jayalaxmi Shripati Aihole
title The demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s review
title_short The demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s review
title_full The demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s review
title_fullStr The demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s review
title_full_unstemmed The demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s review
title_sort demographic profile and the management of infantile inguinal hernia: a 3-year’s review
publisher SpringerOpen
series African Journal of Urology
issn 1110-5704
1961-9987
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Abstract Background Inguinal hernia in neonates and infants including children is as a result of failure of processes vaginalis to close. Once diagnosed, it should be promptly repaired on elective basis to prevent possible risk of bowel incarceration. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the clinical profile, management, and outcome of infantile inguinal hernia. Methods Aim of this prospective clinical study was to clinically evaluate the infants with clinical diagnosis of inguinal hernia admitted in our tertiary child care institute from January 2014 to December 2017 over a period of three years. The design of this study was to assess the clinical profile, management and outcome of infantile inguinal hernia. Study was conducted in a tertiary care neonatal and paediatric referral centre in southern India. Infants less than 1 year including neonates were selected for this study on the basis of inclusion and exclusion criteria. The maximum follow-up period was 5 years. Results A total of 118 infants admitted with clinical diagnosis of inguinal hernia were included in the present study. They were grouped as per their clinical diagnosis and age on admission into two groups; 0 to 6 months as group I and more than 6 months to 12 months as group II. All of them underwent surgical repair as soon as diagnosed. Overall survival rate was 100%. There was no operative mortality 0/118 (0%). Rate of recurrence was 0.034% without any surgical site infections. Conclusion Early surgical intervention in the form of inguinal herniotomy is the most appropriate management of inguinal hernia in infants including the neonates as soon as diagnosed on elective basis.
topic Inguinal hernia
Neonates
Processus vaginalis
Herniotomy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12301-020-00037-6
work_keys_str_mv AT jayalaxmishripatiaihole thedemographicprofileandthemanagementofinfantileinguinalherniaa3yearsreview
AT jayalaxmishripatiaihole demographicprofileandthemanagementofinfantileinguinalherniaa3yearsreview
_version_ 1724513357617168384