## Correct Answer: B. Lateral cutaneous nerve of thigh The lateral cutaneous nerve of thigh (LCNT), also called the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve, is a sensory branch of the lumbar plexus (L2–L3) that emerges from the lateral border of the psoas major and passes under or through the inguinal ligament at the medial aspect of the anterior superior iliac spine (ASIS). During laparoscopic hernia repair (TEP or TAPP), mesh placement in the myopectineal orifice and fixation lateral to the "triangle of pain" (bounded by the gonadal vessels medially and the LCNT laterally) risks entrapping this nerve. The triangle of pain is the critical danger zone where the LCNT is vulnerable. Entrapment causes **meralgia paresthetica**—burning pain, numbness, and tingling along the lateral thigh and anterolateral leg. This is the most common nerve injury in laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair, occurring in 0.5–2% of cases. The pain is typically dysesthetic (burning) rather than sharp, and is worse with hip flexion or tight clothing. Unlike femoral nerve injury (which causes quadriceps weakness and knee extension loss), LCNT injury is purely sensory. The symptom localizes to the lateral thigh, which is the distribution of LCNT, making this the discriminating feature for this question. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Ilioinguinal nerve** — The ilioinguinal nerve (L1) exits the external inguinal ring and supplies sensation to the medial thigh, scrotum/labia majora, and lower abdomen. Its entrapment causes pain in the medial thigh and groin, NOT the lateral thigh. During laparoscopic repair, this nerve is not in the dissection plane (it lies superficial to the mesh), making injury less likely than LCNT. This is a common distractor because students confuse the anatomical territories of inguinal nerves. **C. Iliohypogastric nerve** — The iliohypogastric nerve (L1) runs parallel to the ilioinguinal nerve and supplies the lower abdomen and suprapubic region. Its entrapment causes pain in the lower abdomen and suprapubic area, not the lateral thigh. Like the ilioinguinal nerve, it lies superficial to the mesh during laparoscopic repair and is not at risk in the myopectineal orifice dissection. This option exploits confusion between the three inguinal nerves. **D. Femoral nerve** — The femoral nerve (L2–L4) lies medial to the LCNT and is protected by the periosteum of the pubis during laparoscopic repair. Femoral nerve injury causes motor deficits (quadriceps weakness, loss of knee extension, hip flexion weakness) and sensory loss over the anterior thigh, not isolated lateral thigh pain. Femoral nerve injury is rare in laparoscopic hernia repair because it is not in the triangle of pain. This is a trap for students who think 'thigh pain = femoral nerve.' ## High-Yield Facts - **Lateral cutaneous nerve of thigh** (LCNT) emerges from L2–L3 and passes under the inguinal ligament at the medial ASIS—the critical point of vulnerability during laparoscopic hernia repair. - **Triangle of pain** (bounded by gonadal vessels medially and LCNT laterally) is the danger zone for LCNT entrapment during mesh fixation in laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair. - **Meralgia paresthetica** is the clinical syndrome from LCNT entrapment: burning dysesthesia, numbness, and tingling in the lateral thigh and anterolateral leg—purely sensory, no motor deficit. - **Lateral thigh pain** after laparoscopic hernia repair is pathognomonic for LCNT injury; medial thigh/groin pain suggests ilioinguinal nerve; lower abdominal pain suggests iliohypogastric nerve. - **Incidence of LCNT injury** in laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair is 0.5–2%, making it the most common nerve complication; most cases resolve within 6–12 months with conservative management. ## Mnemonics **LCNT Anatomy: ASIS Rule** LCNT passes under the inguinal ligament at the **medial ASIS**—remember 'ASIS' as the anatomical landmark. It emerges from the **lateral psoas border** (L2–L3) and runs laterally toward the ASIS, then under the ligament into the thigh. This is where laparoscopic mesh fixation can trap it. **Triangle of Pain: GON-LCNT** **GON** (Gonadal vessels) medially, **LCNT** laterally—these two structures bound the triangle of pain. Mesh fixation must stay **medial to LCNT** (lateral to gonadal vessels) to avoid entrapment. This is the golden rule of safe laparoscopic hernia repair. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "thigh pain after hernia repair" with femoral nerve to trap students who equate any thigh symptom with femoral nerve injury. The key discriminator is **lateral thigh** (LCNT) vs. **anterior thigh** (femoral nerve) and **sensory only** (LCNT) vs. **motor + sensory** (femoral nerve). ## Clinical Pearl In Indian surgical practice, laparoscopic hernia repair is increasingly popular for bilateral and recurrent hernias. Postoperative lateral thigh dysesthesia is often dismissed as "minor" but significantly impacts quality of life; patient counseling about this risk and conservative management (NSAIDs, gabapentin, reassurance) is essential. Most cases resolve spontaneously within 6–12 months, but awareness of LCNT anatomy prevents unnecessary re-exploration. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 35 (Inguinal Hernia); Sabiston Textbook of Surgery Ch. 43_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.