The Impact of Surgical Repair on Restlessness in Infants with Non-Incarcerated Inguinal Hernias: A Prospective Study
Ortal Schaffer, Ori Blich, Alon Yulevich, Eleonora Niazov, Yaron Armon, Osnat Zmora

TL;DR
This study finds that infants with non-incarcerated inguinal hernias experience restlessness that improves after surgical repair.
Contribution
The study is the first to prospectively evaluate restlessness in infants with non-incarcerated inguinal hernias and demonstrate improvement post-surgery.
Findings
Infants with non-incarcerated hernias showed significantly higher restlessness than controls before surgery.
Surgical repair significantly reduced restlessness scores to levels comparable to healthy controls.
Infants with higher baseline restlessness showed more pronounced improvement after surgery.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Pediatric inguinal hernias are usually described as asymptomatic unless they become incarcerated. Our aim was to evaluate possible restlessness associated with non-incarcerated inguinal hernias in infants. Methods: We performed a prospective multi-center cohort study that included infants, up to 18 months of age, with non-incarcerated inguinal hernias. Restlessness was evaluated by caregivers before (“Pre”) and after (“Post”) hernia repair using two scales, the soothability section of the Infant Behavioral Questionnaire (IBQ) and the Parents’ Restlessness Score (PRS) on a 1–5 scale (5—highest degree of restlessness), and then compared to matched healthy controls. The change in restlessness after surgery was evaluated by Parents’ Change in restlessness Score (PCS) and the difference between Pre- and Post-scores (Δ). A subgroup analysis for patients with Pre-PRS ≥ 3…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHernia repair and management · Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia Studies · Gastroesophageal reflux and treatments
