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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Adaptive surgical approach to giant inguinoscrotal hernia with enterocutaneous fistula in an adult paraplegic male with severe lordoscoliosis causing loss of domain: A case report and review of literature.

Year:
2025
Authors:
Knott JL et al.
Affiliation:
University of Illinois Chicago College of Medicine · United States

Abstract

<h4>Introduction</h4>Giant inguinoscrotal hernias (GIH) are rare and can be complicated by loss of domain (LOD), which limits standard surgical repair options due to increased intra-abdominal pressure (IAP) and the risk of post-operative respiratory compromise. No prior reports describe GIH with LOD in patients with severe spinal deformity.<h4>Presentation of case</h4>A 34-year-old paraplegic male with severe lordoscoliosis and bilateral strangulated GIH presented with small bowel strangulation and underwent emergent bowel resection. Due to LOD and anterior peritoneal displacement from scoliosis, standard abdominal reintegration was impossible, and the hernia was not reduced. His post-operative course was complicated by a scrotal enterocutaneous fistula. Two years later, bowel evisceration from the ECF site prompted elective reconstruction. Intraoperatively, a continuous chamber between the abdomen and scrotum was identified, containing most bowel loops, including the fistulized segment. The fistulized segment was resected, and remaining loops repositioned into the scrotum, which functioned as a permanent neoperitoneal cavity. Postoperative edema resolved conservatively, and the patient resumed normal bowel movements.<h4>Discussion</h4>This case highlights the challenges posed by severe spinal deformities in GIH management. Traditional reduction strategies to mitigate IAP following full bowel reintegration were impractical due to anatomical constraints. Instead, the preserved scrotal sac served as a functional extension of the abdominal cavity.<h4>Conclusion</h4>This is the first reported case of bilateral GIH with LOD in a paraplegic patient with severe scoliosis. The novel approach of scrotal repositioning offers a viable alternative when standard abdominal reintegration is unfeasible.

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Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/40602167