Journal of Pediatric Surgery Case Reports (Jul 2021)

A remnant vitelline vessel detected and resected during laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair in a 4-year-old girl

  • Akio Kawami,
  • Toshiro Kimura,
  • Ryosuke Matsuoka,
  • Yuichiro Hayashi,
  • Yasushi Fuchimoto

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 70
p. 101880

Abstract

Read online

We present the case of a 4-year-old girl in whom a vitelline vessel remnant (VVR) was incidentally detected and then resected during laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair. VVR can cause intestinal obstruction, which is sometimes fatal. There are few reports of asymptomatic VVR that are discovered incidentally during surgery.Inguinal hernia repairs account for a large percentage of the operations performed by pediatric surgeons. Currently, the laparoscopic approach is most often used because of its minimal invasiveness and cosmetic results. The laparoscopic approach can also incidentally detect unknown abnormalities, such as non-symptomatic VVR, in the abdominal cavity, thereby facilitating its treatment in a minimally invasive manner. VVR may have abundant blood flow. Therefore, during laparoscopic resection, attention to bleeding is important.

Keywords