Umbilical Cord Defects with Dr. Kenneth Azarow podcast cover art
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Umbilical Cord Defects with Dr. Kenneth Azarow

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Topic overview

Dr. Kenneth Azarow discusses management of umbilical hernias in children, emphasizing that most close spontaneously by age 2 and recommending waiting until age 4-5 (before school entry) for elective repair. He addresses common clinical scenarios including large defects, prominent proboscis, and differentiating true incarceration from benign conditions like incarcerated omentum or infected urachal cysts.

Key takeaways

  • Most umbilical hernias close spontaneously in the first 1-2 years; defer repair until age 4-5 (before school entry) unless family strongly prefers earlier.
  • Large defect size, prominent proboscis, and patient ethnicity do not justify early surgical intervention before age 2.
  • Red, tender umbilical mass in a child eating normally is rarely incarcerated bowel—consider incarcerated omentum or infected urachal cyst instead.
  • Avoid elective umbilical hernia repair before age 2-3 due to emerging anesthesia neurodevelopmental concerns and high spontaneous closure rates.
  • True incarcerated umbilical hernia requires bowel obstruction symptoms; absence of feeding intolerance argues against emergent surgery.

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