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Umbilical hernia, cysts and fistulas

  1. UMBILICAL HERNIA

Anatomy of umbilical region

  • Umbilical ring is located at L4 and L5 (lower in infants)
  • The umbilical skin supplied by T10 spinal cord
  • Components of the umbilical ring – linea alba, falciform ligament, median umbilical ligament, umbilical fascia
  • Meeting pointing of 4 folds of embryonic plate and three systems
    • Gastrointetinal (vitellointestinal), urinary (urachus), vascular (umbilical vessels)

Epidemiology/etiology

  • Umbilical hernia can develop due to either
    • Absence of umbilical fascia
    • Incomplete closure of umbilical defect (omphalocele)
  • Can be congenital – more common in males
  • Or acquired – more common in females
    • Raised intra-abdominal pressure – pregnancy, obesity
    • Incisional hernia through umbilical scar following surgery
  • More common in Down’s syndrome and Beckwith-Weidman syndrome

Clinical features

  • Swelling in the umbilical region within first few months after birth
    • Size increases during crying
  • Can be felt with finger during crying
  • If the hernia is irreducible and obstructive it can present with pain, distension and vomiting

Treatment

  • Initially conservative – can disappear spontaneously in few months after birth
    • Can be assisted by adhesive strapping across abdomen
  • Indications for surgery
    • Persists for >2 years
    • Defect is >2cm
    • Acquired/adult hernia

Types of surgeries

  • Primary closure of defect
    • Infraumbilical incision made encircling its lower half
    • Sac is dissected and released from the umbilicus and subcutaneous tissue
    • Sac is opened and its contents are reduced, excess part is excised. Defect is closed
  • Sublay mesh repair
    • For hernias >3cm with degenerated skin on surface
    • Polypropylene mesh used as sublay and then rectus sheath is closed
  • Umbilectomy
    • When there is unhealthy thin skin over the large hernia
    • Only done in adults with large umbilical hernias and thinning of umbilical skin
  • Laparoscopic repair
  1. PARAUMBILICA HERNIA
  • Can be supra or infra umbilical hernias
  • More common in adults, especially females
  • Protrusion or herniation through linea alba, just above or below the umbilicus
  • Enlarges ovally; neck of sac is usually narrow
    • Contents – omentum, small intestine and sometimes large intestine
  • There is a tendency for adhesions, irreducibility and obstruction
  • Predisposing factors – obesity, multiple pregnancies, flabby abdominal wall

Clinical features

  • Swelling with smooth surface, distinct edges, resonant with dragging pain and impulse on coughing
  • Large hernias can cause intestinal colic due to subactue intestinal obstruction
  • Eventually strangulation can occur

Treatment

  • Always surgery
  • Dissection of hernial sac and placement of mesh in retrorectus plane
  • Umbilectomy may be required – if paraumbilical hernia is >4cm
  1. UMBILICAL CYST (Urachal cyst)
  • The urachus is a primitive structure that connects the umbilical cord to the bladder in the developing baby
    • It normally disappears before birth but may remain patent in some people
  • Urachal cysts form when both the umbilical and vesical ends of the urachal lumen close while a portion in the middle remains patent and fluid-filled
  • They usually remain asymptomatic until complicated by an infection – usually in adolescents or adults

Clinical features

  • Lower abdominal pain
  • Fever
  • Abdominal lump/mass
  • Urinary symptoms – pain, UTI, hematuria

Investigations

  • Ultrasound
  • MRI
  • CT

Treatment

  • If asymptomatic then only monitoring is required
  • Antibiotics
  • Surgical excision
  1. UMBILICAL FISTULA

Etiology

  • Patent vitellointestinal duct
  • Patent urachus
  • Post surgical
  • Tuberculosis

Clinical features

  • Faecal/urinary/mucoid discharge
  • Recurrent infection
  • Pain, tenderness, excoriation in and around umbilicus

Investigations

  • Fistulogram
  • CT
  • US abdomen
  • Discharge study, cytology

Treatment

  • Fistulectomy and resection of bowel segment, patent vitellointestinal tract and anastomosis of the bowel
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