What is an inguinal hernia?
An inguinal hernia happens when tissue, usually part of the intestine or surrounding fat, pushes through a weak spot in the lower abdominal wall, in the groin area. This creates a bulge, and often discomfort or pain, especially with lifting, coughing, or prolonged standing. Inguinal hernias are less common in women than in men, but they still happen, and they're sometimes overlooked because groin pain in women gets attributed to other causes first.
Why inguinal hernias look different in women
In men, the inguinal canal carries the spermatic cord. In women, it carries the round ligament, a band of tissue that helps hold the uterus in place. That difference changes both how a hernia tends to form and what has to be protected during repair.
- Femoral hernias are more common in women. These sit just below the main inguinal canal, near the blood vessels that run into the thigh, and carry a higher risk of the trapped tissue losing its blood supply if left untreated.
- The hernia sac can occasionally involve the ovary or fallopian tube. This is uncommon, but it's one reason imaging and a careful exam matter before surgery.
- The bulge itself is often smaller and harder to feel than in men, since there's no scrotum for it to extend into.
Why the diagnosis is sometimes missed
Groin pain in women is commonly attributed first to ovarian cysts, round ligament pain in pregnancy, endometriosis, or hip problems. Because the hernia itself can be subtle on exam, it sometimes takes longer to reach the right diagnosis than it would in a man with the same problem. If groin pain doesn't have a clear explanation, it's worth being evaluated specifically for a hernia.
How robotic-assisted repair works
During robotic surgery, Dr. Rodriguez sits at a console near the operating table and controls robotic arms with his hands and feet. The robot gives a high-definition, 3D view inside the body and translates his movements with extra precision. The rest of the surgical team stays right at your side throughout.
This is a repair, not a removal. The hernia itself isn't taken out. Instead, the bulging tissue is reduced back into place, and the weak spot is covered with mesh to keep it from coming back. The wide view the robotic camera provides is especially useful here, since it lets Dr. Rodriguez check the femoral space at the same time as the inguinal canal and confirm there isn't a second, hidden hernia nearby, while carefully protecting the round ligament and nearby nerves and blood vessels.
Step by step
- Before you go back: you'll be asked to urinate, since a full bladder can block the surgeon's view.
- Getting in: three small incisions, about 1cm each, are made in the upper abdomen rather than right over the hernia. This placement gives the robotic instruments good mechanical advantage and a clear, wide view of the entire area, including the femoral space.
- Finding the hernia: the surgeon creates a small flap in the abdominal lining to clearly see the round ligament, blood vessels, nerves, and the hernia itself before doing anything else.
- Repair, reducing the hernia: the bulging tissue is gently freed and returned to its normal position inside the abdomen.
- Full view of the danger zones: the surgeon clears the surrounding area (called the myopectineal orifice) for a complete view of the groin's key nerves and blood vessels, which normally stay covered by a layer of fat and connective tissue. Staying on top of that layer is what keeps them protected.
- Repair, placing the mesh: a synthetic mesh is placed over the weak area, covering both the inguinal and femoral spaces, and anchored to keep it from shifting. The surgeon checks that the mesh lies completely flat, with no folds or gaps that could let the hernia come back.
- Closing up: the lining is closed back over the mesh, and the small incisions are closed with internal stitches and a waterproof skin glue (no staples or visible stitches to remove).
- Nerve block: a numbing medication is often injected near the groin nerves to reduce pain afterward and cut down on the need for narcotics.
Possible complications
- Bleeding or infection, lowered by careful cautery, antiseptic skin prep, sterile technique, and antibiotics before surgery
- Injury to intestines, blood vessels, or nerves during initial entry and during the dissection process. This risk is small, but does vary based on anatomy and scar tissue
- Hernia recurrence, lowered by making sure the mesh lies completely flat with no folds
- Nerve injury or chronic pain in the groin
- Injury to the round ligament, which is identified and protected throughout the repair
Pain control after surgery
Pain is managed with a combination approach so you need fewer narcotics:
- NSAIDs, such as Advil (ibuprofen) or Celebrex (celecoxib), to reduce inflammation
- Tylenol (acetaminophen) for pain and fever
- Robaxin (methocarbamol), a muscle relaxant
- Narcotics only if needed, for the shortest time possible
Recovery: what to expect
- Hospital stay: most patients go home the same day, with mild pain, swelling, or bruising.
- Activity: walk as tolerated; avoid anything strenuous.
- Lifting: nothing over 10 pounds until your first follow-up visit.
- Wound care: you can shower the day of surgery, but do not submerge incisions in a pool, tub, or other body of water for at least 4 weeks. Incisions are closed underneath the skin and sealed with a waterproof glue.
- Sun protection: healing incisions sunburn easily and can discolor, sometimes permanently, so keep them covered.
- Fever over 101°F
- Pain that medication doesn't control
- Redness, swelling, or drainage at an incision
- Trouble urinating or breathing
- Significant constipation
If it's after hours, your call will be routed to our answering service. The on-call surgeon or PA will receive your message and contact you.
For uncontrolled pain, shortness of breath, chest pain, or inability to keep fluids down, seek urgent medical attention right away rather than waiting for office hours.