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Case Reports
. 2001 Sep;5(3):156-7.
doi: 10.1007/s100290100016.

Sliding appendiceal inguinal hernia with a congenital fibrovascular band connecting the appendix vermiformis to the right testis

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Case Reports

Sliding appendiceal inguinal hernia with a congenital fibrovascular band connecting the appendix vermiformis to the right testis

P Oguzkurt et al. Hernia. 2001 Sep.

Abstract

It is not uncommon to find the appendix vermiformis within a hernia sac; however, sliding appendiceal inguinal hernia is rare. A 9-month-old boy with an incarcerated right scrotal hernia is presented in this case report. Although the hernia was reduced through a conservative approach, appendix vermiformis remained in the hernia sac because of its attachment to the upper pole of the right testis. Exploratory surgery during the inguinal hernia repair revealed a connecting band that extended from the appendix vermiformis into the scrotum and attached to the right testicle. Histologic examination showed that the band was congenital. After reduction of an incarcerated hernia, the persistence of a thickened or a cord-like structure is a warning for the presence of a sliding hernia. We suggest that this uncommon developmental anomaly is likely to cause the processus vaginalis to remain patent, thus facilitating hernia formation.

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