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Given a patient with a groin mass, the resident can accurately differentiate the anatomic
landmarks of a femoral hernia in contrast to those of an inguinal hernia.
When palpable on examination, present as bulges below the inguinal ligament. The bulge can be found
just medial to the femoral pulse and frequently feels like a lipoma or lymph node. Inferior to the iliopubic
tract, midway along the inguinal ligament, is the femoral sheath, containing the femoral artery and branch
of the genitofemoral nerve, the femoral vein, and the femoral canal. The latter is a 1 to 2 cm blind pouch
that begins at the femoral ring and extends to the level of the fossa ovalis.
For the McVay repair, the conjoint tendon is sutured to Cooper's ligament, thus
patching the femoral space as well . Then, at the level of the femoral vein, a transition suture is used to
continue the approximation from the conjoint tendon to the inguinal ligament .
Question 1
You are seeing a patient with an incarcerated femoral hernia. The skin over the hernia mass is warm and
erythematous. The patient has a fever and an elevated white blood cell count. What is your plan for
treatment?
-strangulated- No attempt should be made to reduce the hernia. Rapid
resuscitation, NGT, and replacement of fluids and electrolytes. The patient should be given antibiotics.
Once the patient is resuscitated,urgent surgery commences to expose the hernia, open the sac, and
assess the viability of the bowel. More bowel can be pulled into the hernia so that viable bowel can be
transected and the gangrenous portion removed. An end-to-end anastomosis should be performed and
the bowel then reduced into the abdominal cavity. The hernia is then repaired.
- no mesh
Question 2
What is the differential diagnosis for an infra-inguinal groin mass? What methods can you use to
determine if a mass in the inguinal region is a femoral hernia?
-femoral hernia, femoral aneurysm, lipoma or lymph node
Ultrasound- tender. If inguinal lymph nodes are replaced by metastasis, a primary lesion should be
looked for in the skin in any part of the lower limb. The perineum and anal canal should also be examined.
Lymphadenopathy can also be caused by lymphoma, and groin nodes may be
the only site. Lymphadenopathy characteristically appears as a well-circumscribed mass below the
inguinal ligament that one can get above with the examining hand. Lymph nodes are solid on
ultrasonography, and for this reason, it may be difficult to differentiate nodes from a femoral hernia
containing omentum.
Question 3
A 50-year-old obese woman presents with a firm right groin mass and bilious vomiting. Her plain
abdominal films show a small bowel obstruction. What will your approach be?
Obstruction: resuscitation followed by urgent surgery. At surgery, an approach directly over the hernia is
used. In all patients, the entire gastrointestinal tract must be assessed to eliminate causes of obstruction
other than the hernia itself. This is done before the hernia is repaired. The bowel, if viable, is reduced into
the abdomen. In the case of a femoral hernia, the inguinal ligament can be split anteriorly and the hernia
contents reduced into the abdomen. If the bowel is nonviable, then a bowel
resection can be performed with anastomosis. The hernia is then repaired.
Question 4
Describe the structures that lie anterior, posterior, medial, and lateral to a femoral hernia.
The femoral ring is bordered by:
inferiorly- the superior pubic ramus
laterally- the femoral vein
anteriorly and medially- the iliopubic tract (with its curved insertion onto the pubic ramus)