Abstract

Abstract Aim We present our clinical experience in the urgent repair of traumatic hernias through two clinical cases. Material and Methods Case 1: A 45-year-old man suffering thoraco-abdominal trauma due to running over. Thoracoabdominal CT scan and surgical examination shows a meso tear of terminal ileum and traumatic section of the right lateral musculature. Case 2: A 19-year-old man suffering abdominal trauma due to a traffic accident. CT abdomen is performed which reports large traumatic hernia of the left anterior abdominal wall including intestinal loops, with pneumo and retroneumoperitoneum. Results Case 1: We close the mesenteric gap and repair musculature by associating a polypropylene mesh in the preperitoneal space. The patient is discharged after 13 days. During the two-year follow-up, no hernia recurrence was detected. Case 2: A reconstruction of the wall is performed associating posterior separation of left components, in addition to ileocecal and sigma resection with anastomosis. As a complication presents seroma and chronic sinus, without hernia recurrence during follow-up for 5 years. Conclusions The tendency in traumatic hernias is their repair in a second time attending first to injuries that compromise the survival of the patient, but larger defect can lead to irreversible sequelae since enlargement of hernia, atrophy and muscle retraction, resulting in a more complex repair. If the patient requires urgent surgical intervention for visceral injury, some authors defend the simultaneous repair of the hernia in stable patients. Our group thinks that patients requires individualized management and its urgent repair will depend on the clinical situation.

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