A hernia is caused by a weakness in the abdominal wall that causes the tissue in the abdomen to protrude through the weakness. A noticeable bulge will be felt on the surface of the stomach. Symptoms can become more pronounced when coughing, constipation, lifting heavy objects or standing for long periods of time. You will also feel localized pain and discomfort. The hernia can grow larger and larger, seriously affecting your quality of life. It is also possible that the intestinal tubes in the abdominal cavity can’t be retracted after protruding from the weak point of the abdominal wall, and intestinal necrosis occurs and affects your life. Also from a foreign word, hernia is called Hernia, a word that actually originated in ancient Greece, where surgeons didn’t recognize the disease at the time, and felt that something was bulging out of the abdomen, so how should they describe it? They could only describe it as a branch growing out of a large tree. In Greek, Hernia means a branch, that is, an extra piece of something growing out of the stomach.