Title of article :
Abdominal herniation associated with bullhorn injury as a separate entity from traumatic abdominal wall hernias
Author/Authors :
Kaushal‑Deep, Singh Mathuria Department of Surgery - Uttar Pradesh University of Medical Sciences - Saifai, Etawah , Singh, Vikas Department of Surgery - Uttar Pradesh University of Medical Sciences - Saifai, Etawah , Gupta, Poonam Department of Surgery - Uttar Pradesh University of Medical Sciences - Saifai, Etawah , Mani, Rudra Department of Surgery - Uttar Pradesh University of Medical Sciences - Saifai, Etawah , Lodhi, Mehershree Department of Anaesthesia - Institute of Medical Sciences - Banaras Hindu University - Varanasi - Uttar Pradesh, India
Abstract :
Bullhorn injury is a rare mechanism causing traumatic abdominal wall hernia (TAWH). Bullhorn injury needs to be discussed as a
separate sub-entity among TAWHs as the mechanism of injury is such that the great force is generated at a relatively small area of
impact for a short duration of time which may lead to muscle defect without compromising integrity of overlying skin (referred to
as sheathed goring) leading to herniation of abdominal viscera. The purpose of this review was to discuss abdominal herniation’s
associated with bullhorn injury as a separate entity from TAWHs; recognize the common presentations, mechanism of injury, and
modalities of treatment currently utilized for this rare condition. A comprehensive online English, Spanish, Portuguese, and French
language medical literature search was done using various electronic search databases. Different search terms including MeSH related
to bullhorn‑injury associated injuries including abdominal wall hernias were used. An advanced search was further conducted by
combining all the search fields in abstracts, keywords, and titles. We summarized the data from the searched articles and found 12 cases
who underwent emergency or elective herniorrhaphy with or without the use of mesh. We have proposed a treatment algorithm for
such cases in light of the present era of laparoscopy and propose the usage of the term “bullhorn‑injury associated traumatic hernia”
for such cases. We present here the first most comprehensive discussion of all such cases reported till date.
Keywords :
Bullhorn‑injury associated traumatic hernia , handle‑bar injuries , laparoscopic repair , sheathed goring , traumatic abdominal wall hernia
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics