| Literature DB >> 31704659 |
Tatsuya Tazaki1, Masaru Sasaki2, Mohei Kohyama2, Yoichi Sugiyama2, Ryuta Shintakuya2, Toshinori Hirano2, Shinya Takahashi3, Atsushi Nakamitsu2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The use of tension-free mesh repair techniques for inguinal hernias has led to uniformly low recurrence rates. The main associated morbidity is chronic postoperative inguinal pain. Mesh removal and triple neurectomy is the indicated procedure; there is insufficient evidence to support mesh removal alone without neurectomy in patients with chronic postoperative inguinal pain. PRESENTATION OF CASE: A 76-year-old man previously underwent repair of a right inguinal direct hernia using the plug-and-patch technique. Two years later, he experienced groin pain requiring the use of pain medication. Five years after surgery, he expressed the desire to remove the mesh because of chronic pain, rated 8 out of 10 on a numeric rating scale. We suspected that he was experiencing nociceptive pain caused by a plug meshoma, so we performed a laparoscopic plug extraction. His inguinal pain improved to 2 out of 10 on the second postoperative day, and he stopped taking pain medication by 10 months after surgery. DISCUSSION: The laparoscopic approach to plug removal is safe and simple. We successfully avoided causing new-onset pain by not using a groin incision to remove the mesh plug.Entities:
Keywords: Case report; Chronic pain; Inguinal hernia; Postoperative pain
Year: 2019 PMID: 31704659 PMCID: PMC6920323 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijscr.2019.10.057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2210-2612
Fig. 1Abdominal computed tomography shows a meshoma at the location of the plug (white arrow).
Fig. 2Operative findings.
(a) Laparoscopy revealed that the plug projected into the abdominal cavity (white arrow).
(b) The plug (white arrow), projecting on the medial side of the inferior epigastric artery, is excised.
(c) The extracted plug.
(d) The genital branch of the genitofemoral nerve (white arrow) is ligated and dissected.