Laparoscopic Hernia Repair in Tijuana: Types, Procedure, Recovery, and Costs
Hernias are among the most common surgical conditions in the world — over 1 million hernia repairs are performed in the United States every year. When detected and treated early, hernia repair is a safe, predictable procedure with excellent long-term outcomes. Left untreated, hernias can lead to serious complications that require emergency surgery.
Dr. Carlos Navarrete performs laparoscopic hernia repair as part of his general surgery practice in Tijuana, offering patients from the United States high-quality surgical care at 60–75% less than U.S. prices. This guide covers everything you need to know: what a hernia is, how to recognize one, the repair procedure, recovery, and what makes Tijuana a practical choice.
Understanding Your Condition
What Is a Hernia — and Why Does It Need to Be Fixed?
A hernia occurs when an internal organ or tissue pushes through a weak spot or opening in the surrounding muscle or connective tissue wall. The result is a bulge — most often visible and palpable — that may cause discomfort, pain, or more serious complications if the tissue becomes trapped and loses its blood supply.
Hernias do not heal on their own. Without surgical repair, they almost always grow larger over time, become more symptomatic, and carry an increasing risk of incarceration (the hernia becomes trapped and cannot be pushed back) or strangulation (blood supply to the trapped tissue is cut off — a surgical emergency). The question for most hernia patients is not whether to repair it, but when.
Who is at highest risk
- Male sex — inguinal hernias are 10x more common in men
- Family history of hernias
- Previous abdominal surgery (weakens tissue)
- Age — connective tissue weakens with time
- Premature birth or low birth weight
- Connective tissue disorders
- Obesity — increases intra-abdominal pressure chronically
- Chronic cough (COPD, smoking)
- Chronic constipation and straining
- Heavy lifting without proper technique
- Pregnancy — repeated or multiple
- Ascites (fluid accumulation in abdomen)
Types of Hernias
The Most Common Hernias Dr. Navarrete Repairs
Hernias are named for the location where they occur. Each type has a distinct anatomy, presentation, and surgical approach. Understanding your specific hernia type helps set accurate expectations for the procedure and recovery.
Recognizing the Problem
Symptoms and When to Seek Evaluation
Many hernias are first noticed as a bulge — something that wasn’t there before, often more visible when standing, coughing, or straining. Pain varies widely; some hernias cause significant discomfort while others are entirely painless for years. The absence of pain does not mean the hernia is safe to ignore.
- Visible or palpable bulge — the most universal sign; often reducible (pushes back in when lying down)
- Dull ache or pressure — at the hernia site, worsening with activity, coughing, or prolonged standing
- Sharp pain with sudden movement — lifting, bending, or coughing
- Heaviness or dragging sensation — particularly with inguinal hernias by end of day
- Heartburn and regurgitation — characteristic of hiatal hernias
- Nausea — may indicate partial bowel involvement in the hernia sac
- A hernia that was previously reducible is now hard, tender, and cannot be pushed back — possible incarceration
- Severe, sudden pain at the hernia site
- Nausea, vomiting, and inability to have a bowel movement — possible bowel obstruction
- Redness, warmth, or discoloration over the hernia bulge — possible strangulation
- Fever with any of the above symptoms
A strangulated hernia — where the blood supply to trapped tissue is cut off — is a surgical emergency requiring immediate operation. This is the primary reason elective hernia repair is recommended before complications develop.
Choosing the Right Approach
Laparoscopic vs Open Hernia Repair
Both laparoscopic and open hernia repair are well-established techniques with strong track records. The right choice depends on the hernia type, size, patient factors, and surgical history. Dr. Navarrete discusses the optimal approach for each patient individually during the consultation.
| Feature | Laparoscopic | Open |
|---|---|---|
| Incisions | 3 small (5–10mm) | 1 larger incision |
| Post-op pain | Less — typically managed with oral medication | More — especially first 48–72 hrs |
| Return to work (desk) | 5–10 days | 10–14 days |
| Return to physical activity | 2–4 weeks | 4–6 weeks |
| Recurrence rate (with mesh) | 1–5% | 2–5% |
| Bilateral repair (both sides) | Both sides in one operation | Usually two separate procedures |
| Visibility of anatomy | Excellent — magnified camera view | Direct — tactile feedback |
| Best for | Bilateral inguinal, recurrent hernias, active patients | Very large hernias, complex anatomy, prior mesh |
| General anesthesia required | Yes | Sometimes local/regional possible |
The Operation
Laparoscopic Hernia Repair: Step by Step
The two most common laparoscopic techniques are TEP (totally extraperitoneal) and TAPP (transabdominal preperitoneal) for inguinal hernias, and laparoscopic ventral hernia repair (LVHR) for abdominal wall defects. Dr. Navarrete selects the technique based on hernia type, size, and patient anatomy. The following describes the general sequence for all laparoscopic approaches.
After Surgery
Recovery: What to Expect
Recovery from laparoscopic hernia repair is significantly faster than open surgery. Most patients are surprised by how manageable the discomfort is and how quickly they return to normal activities.
- 1–2 hours in recovery room
- Pain 2–4/10 — well managed with oral medication
- Shoulder/upper abdominal gas pain from CO2 — temporary
- Walking encouraged same day
- Light diet tolerated by evening
- Discharged same day in most cases
- Soreness at port sites — improving daily
- Scrotal swelling and bruising common after inguinal repair — temporary
- Short walks every few hours recommended
- Light daily activities as tolerated
- No driving while on narcotic pain medication
- Shower after 24–48 hrs; no submerging incisions
- Desk work resumes: days 7–10
- Driving resumes when off narcotics and comfortable
- Light exercise: week 2–3
- Physical or manual labor: week 4–6
- Heavy lifting (>20 lbs): cleared at follow-up, typically week 4–6
- Full recovery: 4–6 weeks for most patients
Cost Comparison
USA vs. Tijuana: What You Will Actually Pay
Hernia repair in the United States is among the more expensive elective surgeries — particularly because hospital facility fees often dwarf the surgeon’s fee itself. Many patients with insurance still face significant out-of-pocket costs through deductibles and co-insurance.
“A hernia that needs repair today will need repair eventually — and it will be harder, riskier, and more expensive if you wait for a complication. The best time to fix a hernia is when it’s elective.”
— Dr. Carlos Navarrete, Tijuana Bariatric ClinicBefore Your Surgery: Preparation Checklist
- Share any existing imaging (ultrasound, CT) with Dr. Navarrete’s team
- Complete pre-operative blood work locally and forward results
- Disclose all current medications — especially blood thinners
- Stop NSAIDs (ibuprofen, aspirin) 1 week before surgery unless instructed otherwise
- Fast for 8 hours before surgery — nothing to eat or drink
- Arrange a travel companion — required for discharge
- Book round-trip flight to San Diego — arrive the day before surgery
- Plan 1 recovery night in Tijuana or San Diego before flying home
- Arrange 1–2 weeks off work (desk job) or 4–6 weeks for physical work
- For inguinal repair: bring supportive briefs or athletic supporter for recovery comfort
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Have a Hernia? Let’s Talk.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I wait and monitor my hernia instead of having surgery right away?
For some small, asymptomatic inguinal hernias in older or high-risk patients, watchful waiting is an acceptable short-term approach — studies show that about 70% of asymptomatic inguinal hernias can be safely observed for 2–4 years without significant complications. However, the vast majority of hernias grow over time and become more symptomatic. Any hernia that causes pain, limits activity, or shows signs of enlargement should be repaired. Umbilical, femoral, and incisional hernias carry higher complication risk and are generally repaired more promptly. Emergency repair of an incarcerated or strangulated hernia carries 5–10x higher complication rates than elective repair — this is the central argument for fixing hernias before they become urgent.
What is the recurrence rate, and what causes hernias to come back?
With modern laparoscopic mesh repair, recurrence rates are 1–5% for primary hernias — significantly lower than the 10–15% historically seen with open suture-only repair. Recurrence is most commonly caused by: mesh too small for adequate overlap, inadequate fixation, technical errors at the time of surgery, infection, or patient factors like extreme obesity, smoking, or returning to heavy lifting before full mesh integration. Choosing an experienced, high-volume hernia surgeon is the single most important factor in minimizing recurrence risk.
Will mesh cause problems long-term?
The vast majority of patients have no mesh-related problems. Chronic pain at the mesh site — the most discussed concern — occurs in 1–3% of patients with modern lightweight meshes using laparoscopic technique; rates were higher with older heavy meshes placed via open surgery. Mesh infection is rare (<1%). Mesh migration is a theoretical concern managed by proper sizing and fixation technique. The long-term data on modern laparoscopic mesh repair is strongly favorable, and the recurrence reduction it provides far outweighs the small risk of mesh-related complications in the hands of an experienced surgeon.
Can both sides be repaired at the same time (bilateral inguinal hernia)?
Yes — this is one of the clearest advantages of the laparoscopic approach. Both inguinal hernias can be repaired through the same three small incisions during a single operation, with minimal additional operative time and no significant increase in risk. Open surgery typically requires two separate procedures for bilateral hernias. If you have been told you have a hernia on one side and are considering repair, Dr. Navarrete will assess the other side and discuss combined repair if a contralateral hernia is present.
Can I fly home the day after surgery?
Flying 24–48 hours after laparoscopic hernia repair is generally safe for most patients, provided pain is well controlled with oral medication, you can walk normally, and there are no early signs of complications. Long-haul flights (over 5 hours) are better delayed until day 2–3. The key considerations are: ability to ambulate during the flight to reduce DVT risk, not requiring IV or narcotic medication, and clearance from Dr. Navarrete’s team before departure. Transportation from the clinic to San Diego airport is typically coordinated by the office.
Is hernia repair safe for patients who previously had bariatric surgery?
Yes — and it is notably more common in this population. Bariatric patients have elevated rates of incisional and ventral hernias due to previous abdominal surgery, and weight loss itself changes abdominal wall dynamics. Dr. Navarrete is experienced in operating on post-bariatric anatomy and routinely addresses hernias as combined or staged procedures alongside weight loss surgery when clinically appropriate. For patients presenting with a hernia after previous bariatric surgery, the approach is individualized based on hernia size, location, and overall surgical history.

