K41.20: Bilateral femoral hernia, without obstruction or gangrene Not specified as recurrent hernia
You have a hernia under the groin. This is also called a femoral hernia.
The abdominal wall is the front part of the abdomen. The abdominal wall is made up of various layers. From the outermost to the innermost, the layers are: the skin, the fatty tissue, the muscles and various connective tissue layers. The abdominal wall is very solid. The organs thus remain in the abdomen even at high pressure. The abdominal wall has weak points in some places. At these weaker points, the abdominal wall is thinner, or there are natural gaps in the abdominal wall. One weakness, for example, are the groins between the abdomen and the thighs. If the connective tissue is weaker, tissue can bulge out of the abdominal cavity through the weak spot. Tissue from the intestine may also push through into the bulge. If the weak point is especially small, the intestines may jam in the gap. The blood supply may then be cut off. In that case, the intestines are no longer properly supplied with blood and can thus be damaged. If this condition lasts too long, the intestines may necrotize.
You have femoral hernias beneath both groins. .
With a femoral hernia, the protrusion always remains covered by fatty tissue and the skin. The protrusion below the groin is particularly visible when pressure in the abdomen is high. That may occur for instance during coughing or squeezing. Pressure in the abdomen also increases with heavy lifting.
Additional indicator
On medical documents, the ICD code is often appended by letters that indicate the diagnostic certainty or the affected side of the body.
- G: Confirmed diagnosis
- V: Tentative diagnosis
- Z: Condition after
- A: Excluded diagnosis
- L: Left
- R: Right
- B: Both sides
Further information
Source
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