Nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.

INTRODUCTION: Groin hernia repair is a commonly performed surgical procedure in the western world but large-scaled epidemiologic data are sparse. Large-scale data on the occurrence of groin hernia repair may provide further understanding to the pathophysiology of groin hernia development. This study...

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Main Authors: Jakob Burcharth, Michael Pedersen, Thue Bisgaard, Carsten Pedersen, Jacob Rosenberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3544713?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-41b63b348d674ae0a2f2d0ccc37543eb2020-11-25T01:52:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0181e5436710.1371/journal.pone.0054367Nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.Jakob BurcharthMichael PedersenThue BisgaardCarsten PedersenJacob RosenbergINTRODUCTION: Groin hernia repair is a commonly performed surgical procedure in the western world but large-scaled epidemiologic data are sparse. Large-scale data on the occurrence of groin hernia repair may provide further understanding to the pathophysiology of groin hernia development. This study was undertaken to investigate the age and gender dependent prevalence of groin hernia repair. METHODS: In a nationwide register-based study, using data from the Civil Registration System covering all Danish citizens, we established a population-based cohort of all people living in Denmark on December 31(st), 2010. Within this population all groin hernia repairs during the past 5 years were identified using data from the ICD 10(th) edition in the Danish National Hospital Register. RESULTS: The study population covered n = 5,639,885 persons. During the five years study period 46,717 groin hernia repairs were performed (88.6% males, 11.4% females). Inguinal hernias comprised 97% of groin hernia repairs (90.2% males, 9.8% females) and femoral hernias 3% of groin hernia repairs (29.8% males, 70.2% females). Patients between 0-5 years and 75-80 years constituted the two dominant groups for inguinal hernia repair. In contrast, the age-specific prevalence of femoral hernia repair increased steadily throughout life peaking at age 80-90 years in both men and women. CONCLUSION: The age distribution of inguinal hernia repair is bimodal peaking at early childhood and old age, whereas the prevalence of femoral hernia repair increased steadily throughout life. This information can be used to formulate new hypotheses regarding disease etiology with regard to age and gender specifications.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3544713?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jakob Burcharth
Michael Pedersen
Thue Bisgaard
Carsten Pedersen
Jacob Rosenberg
spellingShingle Jakob Burcharth
Michael Pedersen
Thue Bisgaard
Carsten Pedersen
Jacob Rosenberg
Nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jakob Burcharth
Michael Pedersen
Thue Bisgaard
Carsten Pedersen
Jacob Rosenberg
author_sort Jakob Burcharth
title Nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.
title_short Nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.
title_full Nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.
title_fullStr Nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.
title_full_unstemmed Nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.
title_sort nationwide prevalence of groin hernia repair.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description INTRODUCTION: Groin hernia repair is a commonly performed surgical procedure in the western world but large-scaled epidemiologic data are sparse. Large-scale data on the occurrence of groin hernia repair may provide further understanding to the pathophysiology of groin hernia development. This study was undertaken to investigate the age and gender dependent prevalence of groin hernia repair. METHODS: In a nationwide register-based study, using data from the Civil Registration System covering all Danish citizens, we established a population-based cohort of all people living in Denmark on December 31(st), 2010. Within this population all groin hernia repairs during the past 5 years were identified using data from the ICD 10(th) edition in the Danish National Hospital Register. RESULTS: The study population covered n = 5,639,885 persons. During the five years study period 46,717 groin hernia repairs were performed (88.6% males, 11.4% females). Inguinal hernias comprised 97% of groin hernia repairs (90.2% males, 9.8% females) and femoral hernias 3% of groin hernia repairs (29.8% males, 70.2% females). Patients between 0-5 years and 75-80 years constituted the two dominant groups for inguinal hernia repair. In contrast, the age-specific prevalence of femoral hernia repair increased steadily throughout life peaking at age 80-90 years in both men and women. CONCLUSION: The age distribution of inguinal hernia repair is bimodal peaking at early childhood and old age, whereas the prevalence of femoral hernia repair increased steadily throughout life. This information can be used to formulate new hypotheses regarding disease etiology with regard to age and gender specifications.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3544713?pdf=render
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