William
Dr Kang’s operation for an
hernia is similar to a Marcy. On his last post, he said he is now still calling that the Kang repair. As you know, he performs totally different operation for a direct hernia. He said he was now calling that a Gibbeum (sp?) repair. That repair is supposed to be similar to the original Bassini, but I don’t think he has explained exactly what he does there.
It’s true that the Shouldice is supposedly based on the original Bassini, but I have no idea what that means either. I’ve looked around over the internet and have been unable to define the difference between the Shouldice and the Bassini, because you can’t really get much information on the Bassini.
There is a seemingly good version of a 4 layer Shouldice on youtube, though, by
biohernia. Here’s my understanding, though I’m just someone trying to understand this from afar.
Ignoring the cremaster aspect of the Shouldice, here is how the four layers of the Shouldice are done.
For the first two layers, imagine the patient is lying on the operating table with his/her buttoned shirt on and the surgeon standing on his right side. The shirt represents the transversalis fascia, which is the border between the inguinal canal and the inner gut and hernia sac. The surgeon undoes the buttons (cuts the transversalis fascia) and pulls the right side of the shirt (where the buttons are on a man’s shirt) underneath the left side of the shirt and stitches that to the underside of the far left side of the shirt (in line with the left armpit). Then he takes the left side of the shirt (where the buttonholes are on a man’s shirt) and pulls that over the top of the right side of the shirt and stitches that in line with the right armpit (in the actual operation, this portion of the transversalis fascia is stitched to the inguinal ligament). That process is called the double breasting of the transversalis fascia and represents the first two layers. The one layer of the transversalis fascia has now been doubled up to form two layers for a stronger barrier against the hernia.
The surgeon in the biohernia video calls this the most important part of the shouldice. Indeed, in a study in 1994, they stopped right there with the Shouldice and the results were similar to the results of the four layer.
Concerning the final two layers, though, what I think is true, but have never heard or read anywhere, is that it’s almost a misnomer to refer to the rest as two more layers. The aponeurotic part of the transversus (conjoint tendon?) is pulled over and stitched to the inguinal ligament for the third layer. For the fourth “layer”, however, nothing else is pulled over (hence, not really another layer). This time the aponeurotic part of the same layer is stitched to the inner part of the external oblique just above the inguinal ligament. So that stitch is moved ever so slightly away from the inguinal ligament and I guess has a slightly different angle pulling on the aponeurotic part of the transversus (conjoint tendon). It’s not really much of a different “layer” of cover, but the slightly different angle maybe distributes the pressure a little away from the inguinal ligament is all I can imagine. Maybe like your two different arms pulling on a something from slightly different angles makes it easier to hold that thing in place(?)
The sutures are also run different in the shouldice than the bassini. So, with the shouldice, you have different tension bearing aspects sharing against the pressure of a direct hernia pushing through the transversalis fascia and the aponeuroses pulling against the inguinal ligament. I cant find good information on the Bassini, unfortunately, but as far as I can tell there isn’t as much distribution of the pull of the tissues against each other.