Hernia at 5-mm laparoscopic port site presenting as early postoperative small bowel obstruction
Reardon PR, Preciado A, Scarborough T, et al.
J Laparoendosc Adv Surg Tech A 1999;9:523-25.
A decade has passed since laparoscopy became a popular tool in general surgery.
New technologies continue to surface,and surgeons are still trying to expand the applications
of this technique. Parallel to the development of new techniques, we are also measuring the
presentation of new complications. Incisional hernias are not new complications. Although
their avoidance has been one of the proposed benefits of laparoscopy, several cases of
port-site hernias have been reported. Current surgical wisdom suggests closure of 10-mm
or larger port sites to avoid herniation. Most surgeons do not routinely close 5-mm port sites,
believing that such fascial defects are not large enough to create a significant risk of hernia
formation, thus not justifying the extra time and effort needed to close them. Although this
practice may be reasonable for most cases, it should be reconsidered in lengthy procedures,
particularly if the port has been used for active operative instruments. Under these circumstances,
the repetitive motions in different directions may cause the 5-mm defect to enlarge significantly,
allowing a hernia of considerable size to develop, with the obvious clinical implications of such
a complication. We present a case of a hernia through a 5-mm port site presenting as small-bowel
obstruction in the early postoperative period after a laparoscopic paraesophageal hernia repair.
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