< Groin Hernia Symptoms and Diagnosis | Examination, Ultrasound, CT/MRI
Assessment

Symptoms and diagnosis

Groin hernias commonly present as a bulge and/or groin discomfort, often worse with lifting, coughing or standing. Many are diagnosed clinically; imaging is sometimes helpful.

Bulge / lump Ache or dragging pain Ultrasound CT / MRI

Common symptoms

  • Groin lump/bulge (may come and go)
  • Discomfort with lifting, coughing or straining
  • Dragging ache into the scrotum/testicle (some men)
  • Worse later in the day or after prolonged standing

How diagnosis is made

Diagnosis is often made by history and examination, including assessment while standing and with coughing/straining.

Imaging may help when the lump is intermittent, in athletes with groin pain, after prior repairs, or when the diagnosis is uncertain.

Imaging

  • Ultrasound: commonly used, especially for intermittent lumps
  • CT: useful for complex anatomy or broader abdominal assessment
  • MRI: sometimes used for athletic groin pain or difficult cases

If you have severe pain, vomiting, redness, fever, or an irreducible lump, seek urgent medical assessment.