TITLE:
Inguinal Neuritis in Open Recurrent Hernia Repair
AUTHORS:
Robert Charles Wright, Robert James Wright
KEYWORDS:
Hernias, Recurrent, Nerve, Inflammation, Neuritis
JOURNAL NAME:
International Journal of Clinical Medicine,
Vol.5 No.13,
July
16,
2014
ABSTRACT:
PURPOSE: To investigate the pattern of occurrence
of inguinal neuritis in recurrent inguinal hernia.
We hypothesize that neuritis will occur in more nerves with a wider
distribution than in primary repair. METHODS: Retrospective chart review of
thirty consecutive recurrent inguinal hernia repairs concentrating on the
occurrence of inguinal neuritis. These are not chronic pain patients. Nerves
suspected of containing inguinal neuritis were sent for histologic examination.
Ilioinguinal nerves were routinely resected. Operative parameters and nerve
pathology reports were reviewed. These data were compared with a recent series
of one hundred consecutive primary inguinal hernia repairs with a 34% incidence
of inguinal neuritis. An independent statistician from Whitman University
reviewed the data. RESULTS: Twenty patients were found to have inguinal
neuritis among thirty recurrent open inguinal hernia repairs (66%). This
compares to 34% among primary repairs, but it is a similar rate (P > 0.42)
assuming that the damaged nerve was left intact in 34% of these recurrences
during the primary repair. In recurrent inguinal hernia 69% of neuritis
occurred in the ilioinguinal nerve compared to 88% of damaged ilioinguinal
nerves in the primary hernia. A test for the difference in proportions gives P >
0.10. The most common site of neuritis occurrence in recurrent hernias with
nerve damage to the ilioinguinal nerve was at the external oblique
neuroperforatum among 70% of patients compared to 83% in primary cases. A test
for difference in proportions gives P > 0.36. Two separate nerves were found
to exhibit neuritis in six patients (20%) significantly higher than 1% among
primary hernias (P