Alfonso-Gamba Mm, Mosquera-Gonzalez Mf, Perdomo-Orozco Cf, A Ricaurte-Aragon
{"title":"哥伦比亚腹腔镜入路治疗加伦戈特疝1例","authors":"Alfonso-Gamba Mm, Mosquera-Gonzalez Mf, Perdomo-Orozco Cf, A Ricaurte-Aragon","doi":"10.16966/2470-0991.201","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background: Garengeot’s hernia is a rare presentation of a femoral hernia. Rarely, a Garengeot’s hernia is managed laparoscopically. Case report: We report a case of a 66 year-old male presented with an incarcerated groin hernia at the emergency department. He was taken in to laparoscopic hernia repair, with TAPP approach finding a right hernia femoral defect of 4 cm from which cecal appendix was reduced, in a suppurative phase. Discussion: This is the fourth case reported in the literature. A Garengot’s hernia can be managed laparoscopically. TAPP technique allows reducing the herniated appendix, repairing the hernia defect, determining the contamination of the abdominal cavity and the use of a mesh in the primary hernia repair. Introduction A femoral hernia is defined as a sac which projects through the femoral canal and presents clinically as a groin hernia below and laterals to the pubic tubercle or a finger breadth medial to the femoral artery below the inguinal ligament [1]. An inflamed appendix rarely can migrate in a hernia sac into the crural orifice and become incarcerated. The presence of the appendix in a femoral sac is known as a Garengeot’s hernia [2] due to a French Surgeon called Rene Jacques Croissant de Garengeot who first described a case in 1731 [1-4]. The first appendectomy of a Garengeot’s hernia was performed by Hevin in 1785 [2]. There is an incidence described in the literature from 0.08 to 1% [1,4]. A case of a Garengeot’s hernia managed laparoscopically is presented at surgical emergency department in a fourth level hospital. In a research done in pubmed, academic google, science direct and scielo databases there were 3 cases found. Case Report 66 year old men arrived to the emergency department with history of 8 hours of right groin pain, sense of mass, nausea and vomit. He underwent right inguinal herniorrhaphy 30 years ago. Clinical examination revealed good general conditions with normal vital signs and a non reductable painful mass in the right groin, without local inflammatory local changes such as erythema or edema and no signs of peritoneal irritation. Blood test with 16.000 leukocytes. There were no preoperative images done. With diagnosis of an incarcerated groin hernia he was taken in to laparoscopic hernia repair finding a right femoral defect of 4 cm from which cecal appendix was reduced, in a suppurative phase (Figure 1). Without peritoneal fluid or additional inflammatory changes in the groin. TAPP approach was done with an infraumbilical 12 mm trocar and other two trocars of 5 mm in right and left flanks. The appendix was easily reduced without perforating, mesoappendix was attached with ligasure and hemolock was placed at the base, appendix was extracted with endocath. We performed dissection of Bogro’s and Retziu’s space identifying Copper’s ligament, iliopubic tract and deep inguinal ring. The defect was corrected with a light polypropylene mesh of 15 × 15 cm fixed to the Cooper’s ligament with 3 Protacks without making nearing and primary closure of the peritoneum with another 3 protacks avoiding contact of the mesh with the gut. Installation of drainage system was not considered. No complications in the early postoperative period were presented. He was discharged 4 hours from hospital after surgery with analgesics. Pathology confirmed an acute suppurative appendicitis. The patient returns to normal activities on the seventh day after surgery. Discussion We present a rare case of Garengeot’s hernia diagnosed and treated laparoscopically. This patient had an acute appendicitis and femoral hernia rarely seen, explored and treated at the same time. This case is the first reported in Colombia. Sci Forschen O p e n H U B f o r S c i e n t i f i c R e s e a r c h Citation: Alfonso-Gamba MM, Mosquera-Gonzalez MF, Perdomo-Orozco CF, and Ricaurte-Aragón A (2019) A Rare Case of Garengot’s Hernia with Laparoscopic Approach in Colombia. J Surg Open Access 5(6): dx.doi.org/10.16966/2470-0991.201 2 Journal of Surgery: Open Access Open Access Journal placement of intra-abdominal drains in complicated acute appendicitis may not present benefits and may even lengthen hospital stay [5]. Conclusion Laparoscopy with TAPP approach is an excellent alternative that diagnoses, evaluates the abdominal cavity and resolves the inflammatory condition (acute appendicitis) and femoral hernia at the same time. Conflict of Interest The authors report no conflict of interest and no funding was given for this purpose.","PeriodicalId":115205,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Surgery: Open Access","volume":"33 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A Rare Case of Garengot’s Hernia with Laparoscopic Approach in Colombia\",\"authors\":\"Alfonso-Gamba Mm, Mosquera-Gonzalez Mf, Perdomo-Orozco Cf, A Ricaurte-Aragon\",\"doi\":\"10.16966/2470-0991.201\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Background: Garengeot’s hernia is a rare presentation of a femoral hernia. Rarely, a Garengeot’s hernia is managed laparoscopically. Case report: We report a case of a 66 year-old male presented with an incarcerated groin hernia at the emergency department. He was taken in to laparoscopic hernia repair, with TAPP approach finding a right hernia femoral defect of 4 cm from which cecal appendix was reduced, in a suppurative phase. Discussion: This is the fourth case reported in the literature. A Garengot’s hernia can be managed laparoscopically. TAPP technique allows reducing the herniated appendix, repairing the hernia defect, determining the contamination of the abdominal cavity and the use of a mesh in the primary hernia repair. Introduction A femoral hernia is defined as a sac which projects through the femoral canal and presents clinically as a groin hernia below and laterals to the pubic tubercle or a finger breadth medial to the femoral artery below the inguinal ligament [1]. An inflamed appendix rarely can migrate in a hernia sac into the crural orifice and become incarcerated. The presence of the appendix in a femoral sac is known as a Garengeot’s hernia [2] due to a French Surgeon called Rene Jacques Croissant de Garengeot who first described a case in 1731 [1-4]. The first appendectomy of a Garengeot’s hernia was performed by Hevin in 1785 [2]. There is an incidence described in the literature from 0.08 to 1% [1,4]. A case of a Garengeot’s hernia managed laparoscopically is presented at surgical emergency department in a fourth level hospital. In a research done in pubmed, academic google, science direct and scielo databases there were 3 cases found. Case Report 66 year old men arrived to the emergency department with history of 8 hours of right groin pain, sense of mass, nausea and vomit. He underwent right inguinal herniorrhaphy 30 years ago. Clinical examination revealed good general conditions with normal vital signs and a non reductable painful mass in the right groin, without local inflammatory local changes such as erythema or edema and no signs of peritoneal irritation. Blood test with 16.000 leukocytes. There were no preoperative images done. With diagnosis of an incarcerated groin hernia he was taken in to laparoscopic hernia repair finding a right femoral defect of 4 cm from which cecal appendix was reduced, in a suppurative phase (Figure 1). Without peritoneal fluid or additional inflammatory changes in the groin. TAPP approach was done with an infraumbilical 12 mm trocar and other two trocars of 5 mm in right and left flanks. The appendix was easily reduced without perforating, mesoappendix was attached with ligasure and hemolock was placed at the base, appendix was extracted with endocath. We performed dissection of Bogro’s and Retziu’s space identifying Copper’s ligament, iliopubic tract and deep inguinal ring. The defect was corrected with a light polypropylene mesh of 15 × 15 cm fixed to the Cooper’s ligament with 3 Protacks without making nearing and primary closure of the peritoneum with another 3 protacks avoiding contact of the mesh with the gut. Installation of drainage system was not considered. No complications in the early postoperative period were presented. He was discharged 4 hours from hospital after surgery with analgesics. Pathology confirmed an acute suppurative appendicitis. The patient returns to normal activities on the seventh day after surgery. Discussion We present a rare case of Garengeot’s hernia diagnosed and treated laparoscopically. This patient had an acute appendicitis and femoral hernia rarely seen, explored and treated at the same time. This case is the first reported in Colombia. Sci Forschen O p e n H U B f o r S c i e n t i f i c R e s e a r c h Citation: Alfonso-Gamba MM, Mosquera-Gonzalez MF, Perdomo-Orozco CF, and Ricaurte-Aragón A (2019) A Rare Case of Garengot’s Hernia with Laparoscopic Approach in Colombia. J Surg Open Access 5(6): dx.doi.org/10.16966/2470-0991.201 2 Journal of Surgery: Open Access Open Access Journal placement of intra-abdominal drains in complicated acute appendicitis may not present benefits and may even lengthen hospital stay [5]. Conclusion Laparoscopy with TAPP approach is an excellent alternative that diagnoses, evaluates the abdominal cavity and resolves the inflammatory condition (acute appendicitis) and femoral hernia at the same time. Conflict of Interest The authors report no conflict of interest and no funding was given for this purpose.\",\"PeriodicalId\":115205,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Surgery: Open Access\",\"volume\":\"33 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"1900-01-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Surgery: Open Access\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.16966/2470-0991.201\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Surgery: Open Access","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.16966/2470-0991.201","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:Garengeot疝是一种罕见的股疝。很少用腹腔镜治疗加朗乔疝。病例报告:我们报告一个66岁的男性在急诊科提出了一个嵌顿腹股沟疝。他被送往腹腔镜疝修补术,TAPP入路发现右侧疝股缺损4cm,盲肠阑尾缩小,处于化脓期。讨论:这是文献中报道的第四个病例。加伦戈氏疝可以通过腹腔镜治疗。TAPP技术可以减少阑尾疝,修复疝缺损,确定腹腔污染,并在原发性疝修补中使用补片。股疝的定义是通过股管突出的囊状物,临床表现为腹股沟韧带下耻骨结节下方及外侧或股动脉内侧一指宽处的腹股沟疝[1]。发炎的阑尾很少会在疝囊内迁移到脚孔并嵌顿。阑尾位于股囊内被称为Garengeot疝[2],法国外科医生Rene Jacques Croissant de Garengeot于1731年首次描述了一个病例[1-4]。1785年Hevin进行了第一例Garengeot疝阑尾切除术[2]。文献中有0.08 ~ 1%的发生率[1,4]。在外科急诊科在一个四级医院腹腔镜下处理的一例加朗热疝。在pubmed,学术谷歌,science direct和scielo数据库中进行的一项研究发现了3个案例。66岁男性,因右腹股沟疼痛、肿块感、恶心呕吐8小时就诊急诊科。30年前他接受了右腹股沟疝修补术。临床检查一般情况良好,生命体征正常,右侧腹股沟处有一不可还原的疼痛肿块,局部无炎性局部改变,如红斑、水肿,腹膜无刺激征象。血液检查有16000个白细胞。术前未做影像学检查。诊断为嵌顿性腹股沟疝,患者接受腹腔镜疝修补术,发现右侧股骨缺损4cm,盲肠阑尾缩小,处于化脓期(图1)。腹股沟无腹膜积液或其他炎症改变。TAPP入路采用脐下12mm套管针和左右两侧另外两个5mm套管针。在不穿孔的情况下轻松复位阑尾,结扎阑尾系膜,底部止血,内腔取出阑尾。我们进行了Bogro’s和Retziu’s间隙的解剖,确定了Copper’s韧带、髂耻束和腹股沟深环。将一个15 × 15 cm的轻型聚丙烯网片用3个孔固定在Cooper’s韧带上,不闭合腹膜,另外3个孔避免网片与肠道接触。没有考虑安装排水系统。术后早期无并发症发生。手术后4小时,患者用止痛药出院。病理证实为急性化脓性阑尾炎。术后第7天患者恢复正常活动。我们报告一例罕见的腹腔镜下诊断和治疗的加朗乔疝。本病例为罕见的急性阑尾炎合并股疝,同时探查和治疗。这是哥伦比亚报告的首例病例。引用本文:Alfonso-Gamba MM, Mosquera-Gonzalez MF, Perdomo-Orozco CF, Ricaurte-Aragón a(2019)哥伦比亚腹腔镜下加伦戈特疝罕见病例。J Surgery Open Access 5(6): dx.doi.org/10.16966/2470-0991.201 2 Journal of Surgery: Open Access Open Access Journal在复杂急性阑尾炎患者中放置腹腔内引流管可能没有益处,甚至可能延长住院时间[5]。结论TAPP入路是诊断、评价腹腔、同时治疗炎症(急性阑尾炎)和股疝的良好选择。利益冲突作者报告没有利益冲突,也没有为此目的提供资金。
A Rare Case of Garengot’s Hernia with Laparoscopic Approach in Colombia
Background: Garengeot’s hernia is a rare presentation of a femoral hernia. Rarely, a Garengeot’s hernia is managed laparoscopically. Case report: We report a case of a 66 year-old male presented with an incarcerated groin hernia at the emergency department. He was taken in to laparoscopic hernia repair, with TAPP approach finding a right hernia femoral defect of 4 cm from which cecal appendix was reduced, in a suppurative phase. Discussion: This is the fourth case reported in the literature. A Garengot’s hernia can be managed laparoscopically. TAPP technique allows reducing the herniated appendix, repairing the hernia defect, determining the contamination of the abdominal cavity and the use of a mesh in the primary hernia repair. Introduction A femoral hernia is defined as a sac which projects through the femoral canal and presents clinically as a groin hernia below and laterals to the pubic tubercle or a finger breadth medial to the femoral artery below the inguinal ligament [1]. An inflamed appendix rarely can migrate in a hernia sac into the crural orifice and become incarcerated. The presence of the appendix in a femoral sac is known as a Garengeot’s hernia [2] due to a French Surgeon called Rene Jacques Croissant de Garengeot who first described a case in 1731 [1-4]. The first appendectomy of a Garengeot’s hernia was performed by Hevin in 1785 [2]. There is an incidence described in the literature from 0.08 to 1% [1,4]. A case of a Garengeot’s hernia managed laparoscopically is presented at surgical emergency department in a fourth level hospital. In a research done in pubmed, academic google, science direct and scielo databases there were 3 cases found. Case Report 66 year old men arrived to the emergency department with history of 8 hours of right groin pain, sense of mass, nausea and vomit. He underwent right inguinal herniorrhaphy 30 years ago. Clinical examination revealed good general conditions with normal vital signs and a non reductable painful mass in the right groin, without local inflammatory local changes such as erythema or edema and no signs of peritoneal irritation. Blood test with 16.000 leukocytes. There were no preoperative images done. With diagnosis of an incarcerated groin hernia he was taken in to laparoscopic hernia repair finding a right femoral defect of 4 cm from which cecal appendix was reduced, in a suppurative phase (Figure 1). Without peritoneal fluid or additional inflammatory changes in the groin. TAPP approach was done with an infraumbilical 12 mm trocar and other two trocars of 5 mm in right and left flanks. The appendix was easily reduced without perforating, mesoappendix was attached with ligasure and hemolock was placed at the base, appendix was extracted with endocath. We performed dissection of Bogro’s and Retziu’s space identifying Copper’s ligament, iliopubic tract and deep inguinal ring. The defect was corrected with a light polypropylene mesh of 15 × 15 cm fixed to the Cooper’s ligament with 3 Protacks without making nearing and primary closure of the peritoneum with another 3 protacks avoiding contact of the mesh with the gut. Installation of drainage system was not considered. No complications in the early postoperative period were presented. He was discharged 4 hours from hospital after surgery with analgesics. Pathology confirmed an acute suppurative appendicitis. The patient returns to normal activities on the seventh day after surgery. Discussion We present a rare case of Garengeot’s hernia diagnosed and treated laparoscopically. This patient had an acute appendicitis and femoral hernia rarely seen, explored and treated at the same time. This case is the first reported in Colombia. Sci Forschen O p e n H U B f o r S c i e n t i f i c R e s e a r c h Citation: Alfonso-Gamba MM, Mosquera-Gonzalez MF, Perdomo-Orozco CF, and Ricaurte-Aragón A (2019) A Rare Case of Garengot’s Hernia with Laparoscopic Approach in Colombia. J Surg Open Access 5(6): dx.doi.org/10.16966/2470-0991.201 2 Journal of Surgery: Open Access Open Access Journal placement of intra-abdominal drains in complicated acute appendicitis may not present benefits and may even lengthen hospital stay [5]. Conclusion Laparoscopy with TAPP approach is an excellent alternative that diagnoses, evaluates the abdominal cavity and resolves the inflammatory condition (acute appendicitis) and femoral hernia at the same time. Conflict of Interest The authors report no conflict of interest and no funding was given for this purpose.