"De Garengeot Hernia with Acute Gangrenous Appendicitis Case Report." by Leon Quach, Alexsandra Biel et al.
 

De Garengeot Hernia with Acute Gangrenous Appendicitis Case Report.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

5-2025

Publication Title

Clinical practice and cases in emergency medicine

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: A De Garengeot hernia is defined as a femoral hernia that contains the vermiform appendix. While femoral hernias carrying the appendix are uncommon, strangulation of the appendix in the hernial sac with concurrent acute appendicitis is an extremely rare and life-threatening condition often presenting with an atypical clinical picture.

CASE REPORT: A 51-year-old man presented to the emergency department with two weeks of persistent right inguinal pain after heavy lifting. Imaging revealed suspicion for an Amyand hernia, an inguinal hernia containing a portion of the appendix. However, intraoperative findings revealed a strangulated De Garengeot hernia with gangrenous appendicitis.

CONCLUSION: De Garengeot hernias are femoral hernias containing the appendix. They are diagnostically challenging and require urgent surgical evaluation and intervention given high risk for strangulation.

Volume

9

Issue

2

First Page

165

Last Page

168

DOI

10.5811/cpcem.35386

ISSN

2474-252X

PubMed ID

40402062

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