World Journal of Pediatric Surgery (Mar 2023)

Epigastric hernias in children and the use of ultrasound in its diagnosis

  • Tatjana T König,
  • Laura S Oerters,
  • Ljuba Spiller,
  • Martin Schwind,
  • Mark Born,
  • Christina Oetzmann von Sochaczewski,
  • Andreas C Heydweiller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/wjps-2022-000544
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2

Abstract

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Introduction There is a paucity of clinical data on pediatric epigastric hernias despite them accounting for up to 6% of all hernia repairs in children. We aimed to provide additional data to supplement those 117 cases of a recent systematic review and to further clarify the role of ultrasound in diagnosing pediatric epigastric hernia.Methods We retrospectively included all 60 patients treated for epigastric hernias in children in two tertiary pediatric surgical departments within 12 years. Associations were tested via point-biserial correlation analyses.Results Epigastric hernias primarily affected preschool children with a median age of 39 months. The vast majority of patients (88%) presented with swelling that was occasionally (30%) accompanied by pain. Fascial defects could be found during clinical examination in 45% of patients with a median size of 5 mm (95% CI 3 to 10). Smaller defects were less likely to be palpable (r=−0.44, 95% CI −0.08 to −0.7, p=0.021). Likewise, ultrasound was used more frequently with smaller fascial defect sizes (r=−0.51, 95% CI −0.16 to −0.74, p=0.007). Laparoscopic repair was used in 11 patients (19%) and more often (4/11) in combination with another simultaneous procedure than open repair (11/48).Conclusions Epigastric hernias are primarily a condition of the preschool child. Ultrasound can be beneficial if the diagnosis cannot be made clinically; otherwise, it is abdicable if it does not change the management of the patient’s epigastric hernia. Laparoscopic repairs might be beneficial for children with multiple defects or simultaneous procedures.