Inguinal herniotomy in children: A five year survey

Abstract
This retrospective review covers our experience over 5 years of 436 hernia repairs in 392 children upto the age of 15 years. The number of emergency presentations was 71 (18.1 per cent) and 66.2 per cent of these were under the age of 12 months. Most cases were initially treated conservatively and only 18 children required operation on the day of admission. There were 11 recurrences (7 elective and 4 emergency cases) giving a recurrence rate of 2.5 per cent. In all eleven cases the original operation was performed by a junior surgeon. The complication rate (excluding recurrences) was 2.8 per cent but may be an underestimate because of the limitations of a retrospective study. We suspect our results are typical of those to be found in any large British hospital and that with careful training and supervision of junior staff in the technique of inguinal herniotomy the results could be improved and approach those found in specialist paediatric units in America.

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