To repair or wait?
Posted , 5 users are following.
I'm a 63 year old male with inguinal hernias on both sides. One is smaller - the other larger. The larger lookes like half an egg portruding out, the other is about half that size. Neither has grown much over the past couple years but the larger one has gotten slightly larger. I occasionally feel slight discomfort up into my hip and down through my testicle on the larger side. I saw a sugeon who suggested I would eventually need to get them fixed and suggested laparoscopic mesh repair, but said mine weren't bad enough to worry about right now and that I could have them fixed at my convenience unless they got larger or were causing more pain. Since then I have researched the topic and am quite unsure what to do. I intend to retire next year and will lose my health insurance. My dilemma is whether to go ahead and do the repair now before they get worse, or wait and see if they even get to the point they have to be fixed. I could easily live with them as they are. I just don't want to jump in and have a surgery that might make my pain and condition worse than it is now, which is tolerable. Has anyone else avoided surgical repair and waited to have them fixed?
0 likes, 4 replies
TheToad Not_Sure
Posted
donneh Not_Sure
Posted
I have the same concerns re watchful waiting vs operating
Certain factors tilt the balance towards operating..
- age
- insurance
- it can only get bigger!
Are u active in sports or exercise?
LaoDing Not_Sure
Posted
Don't go in for this modern knee-jerk attitude of 'get surgery right away!' It's irresponsible and wholly unnecessary. In my opinion, watch and wait is the way to go with mild hernias in adults. But do watch. And don't go in for that scare tactic, 'better do it now while you have insurance.' Someday you will not have insurance regardless and something else totally unrelated to your hernia might come up. It's out of our control. It makes no sense to spend insurance money just because you have it. A doctor's creed is 'do no harm,' and in my opinion reactive mesh repair has done many a person, especially men in their groins, more harm than good.
Finally, try to find out more about good health habits in general. Practicing those may ease your mind and help your hernias too (though I can't say). It is known that hernias don't heal on their own, but I can tell you my 'sac' has gone down by a third by practing good, gentle health habits. I don't expect it to go away, but it doesn't hurt much at all and I can live with it as long as it doesn't keep getting better. That's the WATCH part. I hope things go well for you.
ctrix1 Not_Sure
Posted