Sportsman's Hernia

Definition

 

Groin pain in athletes

- secondary to tear in external oblique fascia

 

Epidemiology

 

Sports with aggressive adduction

- hockey / soccer

 

Pathology

 

Tears in external oblique fascia

- tend to be central

- around spermatic cord and ilioinguinal nerve

- pain may be from nerve entrapment

 

DDx

 

Adductor Longus Tear

Osteitis Pubis

 

Symphysis Pubitis

 

Hip pathology

 

NHx

 

Adductor longus tears

- get better with time

- rarely need surgery

- pain stays below goin

 

Sports Hernia

- may have nerve / ilioinguinal symptoms

- above groin

- often get worse

 

Examination

 

Adductor longus tears

- tender over tendon

- pain / weakness on resisted adduction

 

Sports hernia

- tender over inguinal ring

- may have palpable dilatation of external inguinal ring

- pain with resisted sit up

- pain with resisted leg flexion

 

Dynamic ultrasound

 

May be useful in very experienced hands

 

MRI

 

Can be difficult to see

Is often a clinical diagnosis

 

Management

 

Non Operative

 

Rest

Exclude other diagnosis

 

Operative

 

Hernia repair

 

Technique

- expose external oblique fascia

- identify and protect spermatic cord

- identify tears / pathology

- release ilioinguinal nerve

- repair primarily or with gortex mesh

 

Ilioinguinal nerve

- some surgeons cut the nerve

- risk neuroma

- suprapubic numbness only

 

Can combine with adductor tenotomy