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LAPAROSCOPIC HERNIA REPAIR

About Laparoscopic Hernia Repair

Laparoscopic hernia repair is a minimally invasive surgical procedure performed to correct hernias using small incisions and a camera-guided technique. It involves placing a surgical mesh to strengthen the abdominal wall, reduce recurrence, and relieve symptoms. This advanced approach offers less pain, minimal scarring, faster recovery, shorter hospital stays, and fewer complications compared to open hernia repair.

Types of Laparoscopic Hernia Repair

Laparoscopic hernia repair can be performed using different approaches, including Transabdominal Preperitoneal (TAPP) repair and Totally Extraperitoneal (TEP) repair. Both methods use small incisions, specialized instruments, and surgical mesh to reinforce the abdominal wall, reduce recurrence, minimize pain, and ensure quicker recovery with improved long-term patient outcomes.

Causes Requiring Laparoscopic Hernia Repair

Laparoscopic hernia repair is typically required for hernias caused by weakness in the abdominal wall, congenital defects, heavy lifting, chronic coughing, obesity, or previous surgeries. These conditions may lead to bulging, pain, discomfort, digestive issues, or risk of complications such as incarceration or strangulation, making timely surgical repair necessary.

Weak abdominal wall muscles

Congenital abdominal defects

FAQs:

Laparoscopic hernia repair relieves pain, strengthens abdominal wall, prevents complications, ensures faster recovery.

It is a minimally invasive surgery using small incisions and a camera to repair hernias and reinforce the abdominal wall.

It is required for hernias caused by weakened muscles, congenital defects, strain, obesity, or post-surgical complications to prevent pain or serious issues.

Surgeons insert a camera and instruments through small incisions, place a mesh, and repair the hernia with minimal tissue trauma.

 

Benefits include reduced pain, faster recovery, smaller scars, shorter hospital stays, lower recurrence risk, and quicker return to daily activities.

Yes, it is considered safe and effective, offering fewer complications, precise repair, long-term hernia prevention, and improved patient comfort.