Hiatus Hernia

  • Cause is unknown, may be congenital or acquired
  • This is a sack like dilation of the stomach with protrusion above the diaphragm
  • There is separation of the diaphragmatic crura and widening of the oesophageal foramen
  • There are two types of hernia;
    • Sliding or axial hernia
      • 95% of cases
      • Protrusion of the stomach above the diaphragm creates a bell shaped dilation
    • Rolling hernia or paraoesophageal hernia
      • Less than 5% of cases
      • Cardia of the stomach dissects into the thorax adjacent to the oesophagus
      • This is part is vulnerable to strangulation and infarction

 

Clinical

  • Occur in 1-20% of adults with incidence increasing with age
  • Around 9% have symptoms – gastric reflux and retrosternal chest pain
  • Complications;
    • Both types can bleed and perforate
    • Paraoesophageal hernias can become strangulated and obstructed

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Disclaimer: These notes are my own personal study aid - DO NOT use them for medical advice!