Management of Chronic Postoperative Inguinal Pain

Chronic postoperative inguinal pain, CPIP, afflicts 10% to 15% of the nearly 700,000 Americans who have inguinal hernia surgery every year. CPIP is challenging to manage because it poses many diagnostic dilemmas that can be overcome with a thorough history, examination, differential diagnosis, and imaging. The initial treatment of CPIP should explore all nonsurgical therapies including medications, physical therapy, interventional pain management and cognitive therapy. When nonoperative methods fail, surgical interventions including neurectomy and hernia mesh removal have proven to be beneficial for patients with CPIP.
Source: Surgical Clinics of North America - Category: Surgery Authors: Source Type: research