-
Recurrent Inguinal Hernia vs. Malgaigne’s Bulge vs. Preperitoneal Lipoma regrowth
Good evening!
I have a question whether recurrent inguinal hernias generally present themselves as Malgaigne’s bulge (“phantom hernia”) or preperitoneal lipoma or preperitoneal fat tag in early stages? Or whether – herniating fat must always enter through the wall of the inguinal canal directly or indirectly (through the deep ring) to be a hernia?
To be more specific. 35 y.o. male, history of lots of lipomas and IBS/constipation. I had right indirect inguinal plug and patch propylene anterior repair 2 years ago. During the repair a posterior wall of the inguinal canal was deemed to be week but no direct hernia was palpated. Recovery was uneventful and I hardly felt any pain or anything at all down there due to a prophylactic neurectomy.
Now, three months ago, I started feeling pain in inguinal area that started spontaneously. The intensity of pain decreased over time and I am feeling much better now, although certain things make it more painful (full bladder, full colon, prolonged sitting, but walking is fine).
There is also a small bulge/lump is palpated on Valsalva lateral from the pubic tub. right between the mid-inguinal point and the ileus/hip area. It is located in the lateral 1/3 of the old inguinal line incision, right under it and below it, so I assume that this bulge is pressing against the area where the deep (internal) inguinal ring with the plug is and where the mesh patch cord flaps cover the deep ring and the plug. It also extends a little further laterally from the end of the incision line, so I assume that part of the bulge is under the area not covered under mesh.
The bulge or lump is not visible upon cough or Valsalva only palpable when the hand presses on that area. So, it is not really expansile. The bulge is also very palpable on the raised head test but, again, not visible. It is not painful but certain positions refer pain to the hip.
The hernia center specialist that I am seeing ordered pelvic MRI and Valsalva Ultra Sound. MRI was normal, Ultrasound showed some fat herniation pushing up against the wall of the inguinal canal.
Because I lack the usual expansile visible bulge, the surgeon does not think it is a recurrent hernia but preperitoneal fat (“lipoma” regrowth) with pronounced cough impulse in my groin. The pain may be connected to the mesh plug, not the herniating fat, which the surgeon would be happy to remove through TAPP if pain gets worse.
I am obviously very interested in what in the world that lump is and I was wondering if you have ever seen anything like that before or can offer any ideas.
I have .gif files and jpeg files of the ultrasound videos. If the forum system allows it, I will try to attach one of the videos in the next follow up message – it is almost 12 MB and is playable by Quickplayer (other programs too). I can attach more close-up ultrasound videos of Right Inguinal and Femoral later as well.
Log in to reply.