Complicated Inguinocrural Hernias: Laparoscopic Vs. Open Surgery in the Emergency Setting

IntroductionThe feasibility of laparoscopic treatment for inguinocrural-hernias (ICH) and its advantages over open techniques have already been demonstrated. Nonetheless, there is still no sufficient literature regarding laparoscopy for incarcerated or strangulated ICH in the emergency setting. Our...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lucía Aragone, Nicolás Rosasco, Juana Gutierrez, Raul Croceri, Pablo Medina, Daniel Pirchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-03-01
Series:Journal of Abdominal Wall Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontierspartnerships.org/articles/10.3389/jaws.2025.14408/full
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850032492967362560
author Lucía Aragone
Nicolás Rosasco
Juana Gutierrez
Raul Croceri
Pablo Medina
Daniel Pirchi
author_facet Lucía Aragone
Nicolás Rosasco
Juana Gutierrez
Raul Croceri
Pablo Medina
Daniel Pirchi
author_sort Lucía Aragone
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionThe feasibility of laparoscopic treatment for inguinocrural-hernias (ICH) and its advantages over open techniques have already been demonstrated. Nonetheless, there is still no sufficient literature regarding laparoscopy for incarcerated or strangulated ICH in the emergency setting. Our primary outcome was to evaluate the feasibility and safety of laparoscopic surgery (LS) for complicated ICH by comparing outcomes to open surgery (OS).MethodsA comparative retrospective study with prospective case registry was conducted. All patients who underwent ICH repair due to complicated hernias from January 2003 to December 2023 were analyzed and divided into groups according to the approach during surgery: OS (by Lichtenstein technique) or LS (by transabdominal preperitoneal approach). Demographic variables, hernia size and type, surgical time, length of stay, recurrence and other morbidities were compared between groups.ResultsA total of 8282 ICH were operated in the studied period, out of which 162 were included in the study due to incarceration or strangulation. Of these, 83 were treated by OS, while 79 underwent LS. LS showed a reduction in surgical time (70 min IQR60-103 vs. 117 min IQR100-120; p 0.03), length of stay (1.9 days ± 1.4 vs. 2.9 days ± 3.1; p 0.01) and total morbidities (6.3% vs, 16.8%; p 0.04), with a similar recurrence rate (1.2% vs. 1.2%; p1) when compared to OS group.ConclusionLaparoscopic surgery for the treatment of complicated inguinocrural-hernias is a feasible and safe approach. It allows the benefits of minimally invasive surgery, including shorter surgical time, shorter length of stay and fewer postoperative morbidities, without increasing recurrence rate compared to open surgery.
format Article
id doaj-art-93f3271bf8a0485ca0f0f79a0cba7034
institution DOAJ
issn 2813-2092
language English
publishDate 2025-03-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Journal of Abdominal Wall Surgery
spelling doaj-art-93f3271bf8a0485ca0f0f79a0cba70342025-08-20T02:58:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Journal of Abdominal Wall Surgery2813-20922025-03-01410.3389/jaws.2025.1440814408Complicated Inguinocrural Hernias: Laparoscopic Vs. Open Surgery in the Emergency SettingLucía AragoneNicolás RosascoJuana GutierrezRaul CroceriPablo MedinaDaniel PirchiIntroductionThe feasibility of laparoscopic treatment for inguinocrural-hernias (ICH) and its advantages over open techniques have already been demonstrated. Nonetheless, there is still no sufficient literature regarding laparoscopy for incarcerated or strangulated ICH in the emergency setting. Our primary outcome was to evaluate the feasibility and safety of laparoscopic surgery (LS) for complicated ICH by comparing outcomes to open surgery (OS).MethodsA comparative retrospective study with prospective case registry was conducted. All patients who underwent ICH repair due to complicated hernias from January 2003 to December 2023 were analyzed and divided into groups according to the approach during surgery: OS (by Lichtenstein technique) or LS (by transabdominal preperitoneal approach). Demographic variables, hernia size and type, surgical time, length of stay, recurrence and other morbidities were compared between groups.ResultsA total of 8282 ICH were operated in the studied period, out of which 162 were included in the study due to incarceration or strangulation. Of these, 83 were treated by OS, while 79 underwent LS. LS showed a reduction in surgical time (70 min IQR60-103 vs. 117 min IQR100-120; p 0.03), length of stay (1.9 days ± 1.4 vs. 2.9 days ± 3.1; p 0.01) and total morbidities (6.3% vs, 16.8%; p 0.04), with a similar recurrence rate (1.2% vs. 1.2%; p1) when compared to OS group.ConclusionLaparoscopic surgery for the treatment of complicated inguinocrural-hernias is a feasible and safe approach. It allows the benefits of minimally invasive surgery, including shorter surgical time, shorter length of stay and fewer postoperative morbidities, without increasing recurrence rate compared to open surgery.https://www.frontierspartnerships.org/articles/10.3389/jaws.2025.14408/fullcomplicated inguinocrural herniasincarcerated herniastrangulated hernialaparoscopic hernia repairconventional inguinocrural hernia repair
spellingShingle Lucía Aragone
Nicolás Rosasco
Juana Gutierrez
Raul Croceri
Pablo Medina
Daniel Pirchi
Complicated Inguinocrural Hernias: Laparoscopic Vs. Open Surgery in the Emergency Setting
Journal of Abdominal Wall Surgery
complicated inguinocrural hernias
incarcerated hernia
strangulated hernia
laparoscopic hernia repair
conventional inguinocrural hernia repair
title Complicated Inguinocrural Hernias: Laparoscopic Vs. Open Surgery in the Emergency Setting
title_full Complicated Inguinocrural Hernias: Laparoscopic Vs. Open Surgery in the Emergency Setting
title_fullStr Complicated Inguinocrural Hernias: Laparoscopic Vs. Open Surgery in the Emergency Setting
title_full_unstemmed Complicated Inguinocrural Hernias: Laparoscopic Vs. Open Surgery in the Emergency Setting
title_short Complicated Inguinocrural Hernias: Laparoscopic Vs. Open Surgery in the Emergency Setting
title_sort complicated inguinocrural hernias laparoscopic vs open surgery in the emergency setting
topic complicated inguinocrural hernias
incarcerated hernia
strangulated hernia
laparoscopic hernia repair
conventional inguinocrural hernia repair
url https://www.frontierspartnerships.org/articles/10.3389/jaws.2025.14408/full
work_keys_str_mv AT luciaaragone complicatedinguinocruralherniaslaparoscopicvsopensurgeryintheemergencysetting
AT nicolasrosasco complicatedinguinocruralherniaslaparoscopicvsopensurgeryintheemergencysetting
AT juanagutierrez complicatedinguinocruralherniaslaparoscopicvsopensurgeryintheemergencysetting
AT raulcroceri complicatedinguinocruralherniaslaparoscopicvsopensurgeryintheemergencysetting
AT pablomedina complicatedinguinocruralherniaslaparoscopicvsopensurgeryintheemergencysetting
AT danielpirchi complicatedinguinocruralherniaslaparoscopicvsopensurgeryintheemergencysetting