Background: Femoral hernias are rare in children, accounting for fewer than 1 per cent of all paediatric groin hernias. Misdiagnosis is common and a source of complications. There is no consensus on the age and sex distribution or the optimum method of repair.
Methods: A personal experience of four children with femoral hernia is reported together with an institutional review of a further ten hernias encountered during the past 11 years.
Results: Peak incidence was between 5 and 10 years of age. Misdiagnosis was common, partly because of the variability in presenting symptoms and signs. In this series, boys were more commonly affected but a literature review indicated a similar sex incidence.
Conclusion: A femoral hernia should be positively excluded if the operative findings at inguinal exploration are inconsistent with the preoperative signs and in any child with a suspected recurrent inguinal hernia. Excision of the sac and repair of the femoral canal is curative.