Inguinal Hernia in Children in Lebanon

الفتق الإربي عند الأطفال في لبنان · Hernie inguinale chez l'enfant au Liban

Inguinal hernia in children appears as a groin or scrotal bulge that may come and go but does not heal on its own. Dr. Anthony Kallas Chemaly evaluates reducible and incarcerated hernias and performs pediatric repair in Beirut and Mount Lebanon.

Dr. Anthony Kallas Chemaly

Pediatric Urologist · Fellowship-trained in Europe

  • 📍 HDF (Achrafieh) · CMC (Clemenceau) · MLH (Hazmieh)
  • 📞 Clinic: +961 1 398 630
  • WhatsApp: +961 3 551 326
  • 🌐 Arabic · French · English

Medically reviewed by: Dr. Anthony Kallas Chemaly

Last reviewed: April 5, 2026

Sources used on this page: trusted clinical references and pediatric-hospital resources listed below.

What is an inguinal hernia?

An inguinal hernia happens when intestine or other tissue passes through an opening in the groin area. In babies and children, it is usually related to an inguinal canal that has not fully closed after birth. The result is a soft bulge in the groin or scrotum.

Signs and symptoms

Parents often notice a lump that becomes more obvious when the child cries, strains, coughs, or stands. The bulge may get smaller when the child relaxes. If the hernia becomes trapped, the child may develop pain, a firm or red lump, vomiting, abdominal distention, or irritability.

How is it diagnosed?

Diagnosis is usually made by physical examination. Ultrasound may be used when the diagnosis is uncertain or when the bulge is not visible during the visit.

When is it an emergency?

An inguinal hernia becomes urgent when it is incarcerated, meaning it cannot be pushed back in, or strangulated, meaning blood supply is threatened. A painful, tender, firm, or discolored bulge with vomiting needs immediate medical attention.

Treatment

Unlike many umbilical hernias, inguinal hernias do not close by themselves. Surgical repair is recommended after diagnosis, and it should be performed urgently if the hernia is trapped. The goal is to prevent bowel injury and repeated incarceration.

Dr. Kallas Chemaly's approach

Dr. Kallas Chemaly explains clearly whether a hernia is reducible, urgent, or already complicated. Families receive practical guidance about what symptoms are safe to monitor, what signs require emergency review, and when to proceed with repair.

References

Serving families across Beirut and Mount Lebanon

Dr. Kallas Chemaly sees children from Achrafieh, Gemmayzeh, Saifi, Sodeco, Verdun, Hamra, Clemenceau, Ras Beirut, Rabieh, Mtayleb, Brummana, Beit Mery, Bikfaya, Mansourieh, Kornet Chehwan, Antelias, Dbayeh, Jounieh, Kaslik, Hazmieh, Yarze, and across Keserwan, Metn, and Baabda.

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Frequently Asked Questions

No. Crying does not create the hernia, but it can make an existing hernia more visible because pressure inside the abdomen increases.
No. Inguinal hernias in children do not reliably close by themselves and usually need surgical repair.
Seek urgent care if the bulge becomes painful, firm, red or dark, cannot be pushed back in, or is associated with vomiting or a swollen abdomen.

Concerned about your child?

Early evaluation leads to better outcomes. Book a consultation with Dr. Kallas Chemaly today.