Abstract
Femoral hernias, which are less common than inguinal hernias and more often found in females, occasionally contain more than just small intestine and omentum. Uncommon contents reported in femoral hernia sacs include caecum, appendix, Meckel’s diverticulum (Littre hernia), testis, ovary, transverse colon and even stomach or kidney. Strangulation of femoral hernias containing appendix, small intestine and caecum, and Meckel’s diverticulum are well reported in the literature. Here, we report a case of a male patient having bilateral femoral hernia with bilateral recurrent inguinal hernia. A huge, right-sided femoral hernia contained terminal ileum, appendix, caecum and ascending colon, which were irreducible but neither obstructed nor strangulated. The patient was operated on with a Pfannenstiel incision together with an infrainguinal incision. For reduction of content, an inguinal ligament was also incised. Bilateral preperitoneal, polypropylene mesh hernioplasty was performed along with rolled plug placement in the right femoral canal. The patient had an uneventful post operative recovery and no recurrence in 6 months of follow up.



References
Zacharakis E, Papadopoulos V, Athanasiou T, Ziprin P (2008) An unusual presentation of Meckel diverticulum as strangulated femoral hernia. South Med J 101:96–98
Dahlstrand U, Wollert S, Nordin P, Sandblom G, Gunnarsson U (2009) Emergency femoral hernia repair: a study based on a national register. Ann Surg 249:672–676
Ihedioha U, Alani A, Modak P, Chong P, O’Dwyer PJ (2006) Hernias are the most common cause of strangulation in patients presenting with small bowel obstruction. Hernia 10:338–340
Catellani S (1898) I. Note upon the presence of the caecum and appendix in left femoral herniae. II. Case of inguinal hernia of small intestine without a peritoneal sac. Ann Surg 28:708–715
McVay CB (1974) The anatomic basis for inguinal and femoral hernioplasty. Surg Gynecol Obstet 139:931–945
Chan G, Chan CK (2008) Long term results of a prospective study of 225 femoral hernia repairs: indications for tissue and mesh repair. J Am Coll Surg 207:360–367
Khatib CM (1987) Strangulated femoral hernia containing acute gangrenous appendicitis: case report and review of the literature. Can J Surg 30:50
Duari M (1966) Strangulated femoral hernia—a Richter’s type containing caecum and base of appendix. Postgrad Med J 42:726–728
Perlman JA, Hoover HC, Safer PK (1980) Femoral hernia with strangulated Meckel’s diverticulum (Littre’s hernia). Am J Surg 139:286–289
Frankau C (1931) Strangulated hernia: a review of 1487 cases. Br J Surg 19:176
Akopian G, Alexander M (2005) De Garengeot hernia: appendicitis within a femoral hernia. Am Surg 71:526–527
Babar M, Myers E, Matingal J, Hurley MJ (2010) The modified Nyhus-Condon femoral hernia repair. Hernia 14:271–275
Nyhus LM (1993) Iliopubic tract repair of inguinal and femoral hernia. The posterior (preperitoneal) approach. Surg Clin North Am 73:487–499
Shulman AG, Amid PK, Lichtenstein IL (1992) Prosthetic mesh plug repair of femoral and recurrent inguinal hernias: the American experience. Ann R Coll Surg Engl 74:97–99
Acknowledgments
We acknowledge the support of Dr. K.D. Chavda, Prof. Surgery and Head, Dept. of surgery and Dr. Pankaj Patel, Dean, smt. NHL Municipal Medical College, for their guidance and support.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Patel, R.B., Vasava, N. & Hukkeri, S. Non-obstructed femoral hernia containing ascending colon, caecum, appendix and small bowel with concurrent bilateral recurrent inguinal hernia. Hernia 16, 211–213 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10029-010-0726-4
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10029-010-0726-4