Hernia
Hernia
in children is not difficult of management. If a well-fiitting truss
is adjusted and looked after carefully to keep it in place, the
tendency in all cases is to recover. Where the hernia is not very
large, the tendency is for it to get well without a truss. Children
troubled in this way should be fed very carefully--certainly they
should not be overfed; and where there is distention of the bowels
from gas, overfeeding must be avoided. Certainly milk and bread
should never be given in the same meal, because, when starch and
protein are eaten together, there is always a tendency to develop
gas in the bowels, and gas distention produces so much intra-abdominal
pressure that the hernia is forced out and kept in this state. As
soon as the gas pressure has been overcome by limiting the eating
to digestive needs, the hernial protrusion will return through the
opening, and give nature an opportunity to close the so-called rupture.
As a matter of fact, a hernia is not a rupture--it is a forced enlargement
of a natural opening. It should be understood that there is no rupture
it is only a forced separation of the muscular tissue that guards
the hernial ring. Rubbing or kneading gently the muscles over the
location of the hernia strengthens them, and there is a tendency
to overcome the laxity or weakness of the guarding muscles.