Abstract

OBJECTIVE. To review the results of day-case procedures performed for inguinal hernia or hernia-hydrocele complex in Chinese children.

DESIGN. Retrospective study.

SETTING. Day Surgery Centre of a district hospital, Hong Kong.

PATIENTS. Medical records of 255 consecutive paediatric patients admitted to the Day Surgery Centre for inguinal herniotomy between July 1993 and December 1997 were reviewed. A telephone survey was conducted to assess any long-term morbidity relating to the operation.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES. Patient demographics, success of day-case herniotomy, short-term and long-term morbidity.

RESULTS. There were 230 boys and 25 girls with a mean age of 8.8 years (range, 3 months to 18 years). Seven patients had bilateral herniotomy for bilateral hernia and 14 had circumcision for co-existing phimosis. Eight boys developed recurrence and three had a contralateral inguinal hernia. Postoperative ascent of the testis occurred in three patients, one of whom required orchidopexy. The unplanned admission rate was 1.6%, all for poor pain control. There were four herniotomy wound complications (two haematomas and two infections) and two circumcision wound haemorrhages.

CONCLUSIONS. Day-case inguinal herniotomy is safe and acceptable to Chinese children. Given these satisfactory results, paediatric patients with inguinal hernia can be safely managed with ambulatory surgery performed by suitably experienced surgeons.

Details

Title
Day-case inguinal herniotomy in Chinese children: retrospective study
Author
Yeung, Y P; Cheng; Ho, K L; Yip, AWC
First page
245
Publication year
2002
Publication date
Aug 2002
Publisher
Hong Kong Academy of Medicine
ISSN
10242708
e-ISSN
22268707
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English; Chinese
ProQuest document ID
2787670699
Copyright
© 2002. Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the associated terms available at https://www.hkmj.org/about/website.html