Quick answer

What is inguinal hernia?

An inguinal hernia is when tissue — usually bowel — pushes through a weak spot in the groin, causing a lump and sometimes discomfort. Common in men; often worsens with coughing or lifting. Many need elective surgical repair to prevent complications. Seek emergency care if the lump becomes painful, hard, and cannot be pushed back — possible strangulation cutting off blood supply.

Inguinal hernia — groin lump explained

An inguinal hernia occurs when abdominal contents — usually fat or part of the bowel — protrude through a weakness in the groin area, creating a lump under the skin. It is the most common hernia type — especially in men.

Unlike hiatus hernia (stomach through diaphragm), inguinal hernias appear in the groin — sometimes extending into the scrotum.

Symptoms

Typical:

  • lump in groin — one or both sides
  • more obvious when standing, coughing, straining
  • may disappear lying down (reducible)
  • dragging ache or discomfort — worse after activity
  • no symptoms — found incidentally

Not always painful — but not harmless without assessment.

Who gets them

  • men25% lifetime risk
  • ageing — tissue weakens
  • chronic cough — COPD, smoking
  • constipation — straining
  • heavy lifting over time
  • previous groin surgery
  • family history
  • connective tissue disorders

Indirect inguinal hernias — congenital canal persistence — common in infants and young men.

Complications

Incarceration

Hernia stuck out — cannot push back — needs urgent surgical assessment.

Strangulation — emergency

Blood supply cut off to trapped bowel:

  • sudden severe pain at hernia site
  • hard, tender irreducible lump
  • vomiting, abdominal distension
  • constipation — no flatus
  • fever, tachycardia

Call 999 / A&E immediately — surgery within hours saves bowel.

Diagnosis

GP examination:

  • inspect and palpate groin/scrotum
  • cough impulse — lump expands on cough
  • differentiate from enlarged lymph node, hydrocele, varicocele, testicular mass

Ultrasound if uncertain — especially women (femoral hernia).

Referral to surgeon for elective repair discussion.

Treatment

Watchful waiting

Selected minimal asymptomatic hernias in high-risk surgical patients — close monitoring — strangulation risk remains (~1 to 3% per year for symptomatic unrepaired).

Surgical repair — standard

Mesh reinforcement — open (Lichtenstein) or laparoscopic (TEP/TAPP):

ApproachNotes
OpenLocal or general anaesthetic; common
KeyholeFaster recovery for bilateral; specialist

NHS waiting lists apply — urgent if strangulation.

Non-surgical

Trusses — historical — not recommended routinely — skin complications.

Living before surgery

  • avoid heavy lifting where possible
  • treat cough and constipation
  • know red flags for strangulation
  • manual reduction if GP taught safe technique for reducible hernia

Inguinal vs femoral hernia

Femoral hernia — below inguinal ligament — more common in women, higher strangulation risk — lower groin lump needs prompt surgical referral.

Any groin lump deserves GP assessment — not assume benign.

Children

Infant inguinal hernias — more urgent repair — higher strangulation rate in babies — paediatric surgery.

Inguinal hernias are common and fixable — elective surgery prevents emergency; sudden pain and vomiting with groin lump means A&E, not wait.

Common questions

What does an inguinal hernia feel like?
Soft lump in groin or scrotum — often more visible when standing, coughing, or straining; may disappear lying down. Aching or dragging discomfort — not always painful. Bulge may gurgle. Reducible hernia can be pushed back gently — irreducible lump needs urgent review.
Do all hernias need surgery?
Symptomatic or enlarging inguinal hernias are usually offered elective repair on NHS — open or keyhole (laparoscopic). Very small asymptomatic hernias in older frail patients may be watched — individual decision. Surgical repair prevents strangulation risk.
What is a strangulated hernia?
Bowel trapped in the hernia loses blood supply — sudden severe pain, tenderness, vomiting, constipation, fever. Irreducible hard lump. Surgical emergency within hours — call 999 or go to A&E.
What is the difference between direct and indirect inguinal hernia?
Indirect — through inguinal canal, often into scrotum, common in younger men, congenital weakness. Direct — through abdominal wall weakness, more common over age 40. Surgical repair similar — surgeon distinguishes at operation.
Can a woman get an inguinal hernia?
Yes — less common than in men; femoral hernias more common in women and have higher strangulation risk. Any groin lump in women needs GP assessment.
How long is recovery from hernia surgery?
Keyhole repair — often return to desk work 1 to 2 weeks, heavy lifting avoided 4 to 6 weeks. Open repair — similar restrictions, slightly longer discomfort. Follow surgeon advice — recurrence possible but uncommon with mesh repair.

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