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  2. Paraumbilical hernia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraumbilical_hernia

    These defects are usually congenital and are not noticed until they slowly enlarge over an individual's life time and abdominal contents herniate through the hole creating either pain or a visible lump on the abdominal wall. If abdominal contents get incarcerated (or stuck) in the hole this can cause pain. If the abdominal contents become ...

  3. Diastasis recti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diastasis_recti

    All corrective exercises should be in the form of pulling in the abdominal muscles rather than pushing them outwards. In extreme cases diastasis recti is corrected with a cosmetic surgery procedure known as an abdominoplasty by creating a plication, or folding, of the linea alba and suturing it together, which results in a tighter abdominal wall.

  4. Sister Mary Joseph nodule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sister_Mary_Joseph_nodule

    Medical imaging, such as abdominal ultrasound, may be used to distinguish a Sister Mary Joseph nodule from another kind of mass. [ 2 ] Gastrointestinal malignancies account for about half of underlying sources (most commonly gastric cancer , colonic cancer or pancreatic cancer , mostly of the tail and body of the pancreas [ 3 ] ), and men are ...

  5. Aggressive fibromatosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggressive_fibromatosis

    They are classified as extra-abdominal, abdominal wall, or intra-abdominal; the last is more common in patients with FAP. [26] Most cases occur in the mesentery, abdominal wall, and extremities. [27] One study has shown extra-abdominal tumors making up 43% of cases, abdominal tumors 49%, and mesenteric 8%, though statistics vary. [16]

  6. Umbilical hernia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umbilical_hernia

    An umbilical hernia is a health condition where the abdominal wall behind the navel is damaged. It may cause the navel to bulge outwards—the bulge consisting of abdominal fat from the greater omentum or occasionally parts of the small intestine. The bulge can often be pressed back through the hole in the abdominal wall, and may "pop out" when ...

  7. Epigastric hernia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epigastric_hernia

    An epigastric hernia is a type of hernia that causes fat to push through a weakened area in the walls of the abdomen. It may develop in the epigastrium (upper, central part of the abdomen).

  8. Hernia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hernia

    Symptoms and signs vary depending on the type of hernia. By far the most common hernias develop in the abdomen when a weakness in the abdominal wall evolves into a localized hole, or "defect", through which adipose tissue, or abdominal organs covered with peritoneum, may protrude.

  9. External iliac lymph nodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_iliac_lymph_nodes

    Their principal afferents are derived from the inguinal lymph nodes, the deep lymphatics of the abdominal wall below the umbilicus and of the adductor region of the thigh, and the lymphatics from the glans penis, glans clitoridis, the membranous urethra, the prostate, the fundus of the urinary bladder, the cervix uteri, and upper part of the ...