Factors Determining Outcome After Surgery for Chronic Groin Pain Following a Lichtenstein Hernia Repair.

World J Surg

Department of General Surgery, Máxima Medical Centre, De Run 4600, P.O. Box 7777, 5500 MB, Veldhoven/Eindhoven, The Netherlands.

Published: November 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic groin pain can persist after Lichtenstein hernia repairs, and previous studies indicate that removing entrapped nerves or mesh can alleviate this pain.
  • Factors influencing successful outcomes of remedial surgery include the removal of a meshoma or neuroma and the type of anesthesia used—spinal anesthesia appears more beneficial.
  • Female patients and those using opioids before surgery tend to have poorer results, highlighting the importance of anesthesia choice and preoperative medication management in improving pain outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Some patients develop chronic groin pain after a Lichtenstein hernia repair. Previous studies have demonstrated beneficial effects of removal of entrapped inguinal nerves or a meshectomy in patients with chronic pain after open inguinal hernia mesh repair. Factors determining success following this remedial surgery are unknown. The aim of the study was to identify potential patient- or surgery-related factors predicting the surgical efficacy for inguinodynia following Lichtenstein repair.

Methods: Consecutive adult patients with a history of persistent pain following Lichtenstein repair who underwent remedial surgery were analysed using univariate analysis. Significant confounders (p < 0.05) were combined in a multivariate logistic regression model using a backward stepwise regression method.

Results: A total of 136 groin pain operations were available for analysis. Factors contributing to success were removal of a meshoma (OR 4.66) or a neuroma (OR 5.60) and the use of spinal anaesthesia (OR 4.38). In contrast, female gender (OR 0.30) and preoperative opioid use (OR 0.38) were significantly associated with a less favourable outcome. Using a multivariate analysis model, surgery under spinal anaesthesia (OR 4.04), preoperative use of opioids (OR 0.37), and meshoma removal (OR 5.31) greatly determined surgical outcome.

Conclusions: Pain reduction after remedial surgery for chronic groin pain after Lichtenstein repair is more successful if surgery is performed under spinal anaesthesia compared to general anaesthesia. Removal of a meshoma must be considered as success rates are optimized following these measures. Patients using opioids preoperatively have less favourable outcomes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00268-015-3183-5DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

groin pain
16
pain lichtenstein
16
chronic groin
12
remedial surgery
12
spinal anaesthesia
12
factors determining
8
surgery chronic
8
lichtenstein hernia
8
hernia repair
8
lichtenstein repair
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!