Nerve degeneration in inguinal hernia specimens
Male
Inguinal hernia
Abdominal Wall
nerve degeneration
Inguinal Canal
Hernia, Inguinal
Middle Aged
Groin
Fibrosis
INGUINAL HERNIA.
3. Good health
Settore MED/18 - Chirurgia Generale
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Nerve Degeneration
Cadaver
Humans
Peripheral Nerves
Inguinal hernia, nerve degeneration
Muscle, Skeletal
Aged
DOI:
10.1007/s10029-010-0735-3
Publication Date:
2010-10-16T10:26:11Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
The histological study of the herniated inguinal area is rare in the literature. This report is focused on the detection of structural changes of the nerves within tissues bordering the inguinal hernia of cadavers. Their physiopathological consequences are hypothesized.Primary inguinal hernia was diagnosed in 30 fresh cadavers. Tissue specimens from the inguinal region close to and around the hernia opening were excised for histological examination. A control of the data was achieved through tissue samples excised from equivalent sites of the inguinal region in 15 cadavers without hernia.The detected nerves in the inguinal area demonstrated pathological changes such as fibrotic degeneration, atrophy, and fatty dystrophy of the axons. The thickening of the perineural sheath was constantly seen. These findings were consistently present, independent of the hernia type.The detected nerve alterations lead us to imagine a worsening, or even the cessation, of the nervous impulse to the muscles, leading to atrophy and weakening of the abdominal wall. This could represent one of the multifactorial causes of hernia genesis.
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