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Query: UMLS:C0021933 (
intussusception
)
3,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report the results of 30 antero-posterior rectopexies (APR) for rectal kinetic disorders with descending perineum syndrome. All patients were investigated by digital subtraction defecography and ano-rectal manometry. The associated surgical procedures were: sphincterotomy (n = 13) for outlet obstruction demonstrated by anal manometry or balloon expulsion test: hypertonic sphincter (n = 7), narrow fibrous sphincter (n = 6); 10 cases of prolapsectomy with extended anterior mucosectomy to reduce anterior rectal prolapse; 2 sigmoidectomy for dolichosigmoid. Best results (mean follow-up: 12 months, 3-26) were observed for ano-rectal or pelvic pain and rectal bleeding, which were cured in more than 80% of cases. Faecal incontinence (n = 5) was cured in all cases. Although normalisation of bowel movements and easier defecation were observed in 78% of cases, improvement in the dyschezic syndrome was differently perceived by the patients. Postoperative investigation demonstrated the probable cause of surgical failures (23%): impairment of rectal sensitivity (n = 2), anismus (n = 3), motor
constipation
(n = 4), with dolichosigmoid (n = 3). Severe perineal deficiency was also noted in 4 cases. Solitary ulcer (n = 6), anterior proctitis (n = 8), were cured within 2 months. Postoperative defecography showed correction of rectal
intussusception
without impairment of anterior rectal motility during defecation. These results confirm the efficacy of ARP for treatment of rectal
intussusception
or anterior rectocele. This functional rectopexy avoids the rectal "sling effect" of standard rectopexy which usually increases rectal dysfunction. Nevertheless, ARP alone seems to be insufficient when the associated functional or organic disorders implicated in rectal dysfunction are not also corrected, essentially outlet obstruction and dolichosigmoid.
...
PMID:[Anteroposterior rectopexy for disorders of rectal stasis: clinical and radiologic results. Value of digital subtraction rectography. Apropos of 30 cases]. 260 61
Internal
intussusception
of the rectum is the funnel-shaped infolding of the rectum during straining to defecate. Patients present with multiple symptoms; most commonly rectal pressure and pain in association with
constipation
and straining. Defecography (videofluoroscopy during defecation) is the method of choice for diagnosing this problem. Rectal mobility from the sacrum, infolding of the rectum and sphincter relaxation can be used to grade the findings on defecography (Grade I-IV). The optimal therapy for internal
intussusception
of the rectum is unknown because the cause of the problem is unknown. Conservative management is recommended in all but the most severely symptomatic patients.
...
PMID:Internal intussusception of the rectum: a changing perspective. 269 21
Cineradiographic defaecography combined with measurement of the anorectal angle and descent of the pelvic floor is proposed. The method used in 73 women gave valuable information in 48 patients who complained of anal incompetence, rectal tenesmus, and chronic constipation. In these patients, high and low rectal
intussusception
, rectocele, and pathologic movement of the pelvic floor were detected. Some of these phenomena could only be diagnosed by the radiologic method here described. Quantitations of the anorectal angle and descent of the pelvic floor placed the group with
constipation
halfway between normal individuals and those with anal incompetence. The value of this finding is discussed. Recent improvements in anorectal surgery often make videodefaecography decisive for the choice of the optimal operative method. Therefore, videodefaecography together with measurement of the anorectal angle and pelvic floor descent is recommended whenever anorectal surgery for correction of functional disturbances is contemplated.
...
PMID:Videodefaecography combined with measurement of the anorectal angle and of perineal descent. 296 Mar 48
A consecutive series of 58 patients with idiopathic
constipation
and 20 control subjects were studied by evacuation proctography and measurements were made of changes during rectal expulsion. A wide range was found in the control group. The anorectal angle, pelvic floor descent, and the presence or size of an anterior rectocele did not discriminate between the control and patient groups. Internal
intussusception
was rare. Among constipated patients, the only significant differences from normal were in the time taken to expel barium and the amount of barium remaining in the distal rectum. The majority of control subjects (15 of 20) evacuated most of the barium within 20 seconds whereas 45 of 58 constipated patients took a longer time. Using the area of barium on a lateral view of the rectum as a measure, 19 of 20 control subjects evacuated at least 60 percent of the barium from the distal 4 cm of the rectum compared with only 25 of 58 patients. A varying degree of defecatory impairment was thus established among many patients with
constipation
. The patients were subdivided into those with a normal or abnormal whole gut transit rate as an indication of colonic function, and those who did or did not need to digitally evacuate the rectum as a clinical manifestation of an anorectal disorder. No obvious differences were found between these subgroups using the parameters measured.
...
PMID:Radiologic studies of rectal evacuation in adults with idiopathic constipation. 334 75
Forty-four patients presenting with painful outlet
constipation
had internal rectal
intussusception
documented by cinedefecography. Rectal reservoir reduction by multiple elastic ligation or staple excision of redundant mucosa effectively improved bowel function and outlet symptoms in the majority of patients. Rectal reduction procedures were performed under intravenous sedation with antibiotic coverage, no postoperative sepsis, and a single case of significant postoperative bleeding. Associated abnormalities on defecography were unaffected.
...
PMID:Rectal reservoir reduction procedures for internal rectal prolapse. 365 90
A technique of evacuation proctography using a simple barium and air mixture is described. The study can be easily combined with a barium enema examination. A series of 35 patients with intractable
constipation
have been studied and compared with 7 controls. Most of the abnormalities seen using more elaborate methods of defaecography were identified. Variants of rectal
intussusception
were found in 16 patients. Other diagnoses included rectocele, mucosal and full rectal prolapse, accentuation of puborectalis impression and solitary rectal ulcer. The technique should prove useful in the management of patients with disorders of defaecation.
...
PMID:Techniques in evacuation proctography in the diagnosis of intractable constipation and related disorders. 372 34
Seventy-four patients with intractable
constipation
, of whom thirty-three had slow and forty-one normal intestinal transit, were investigated to determine the aetiology of their disorder and plan treatment. Patients with slow transit had a greater incidence of abdominal pain and distension (P less than 0.001) and only 9 per cent had a normal call to stool compared with 71 per cent of those with normal transit (P less than 0.001). Internal and sphincter function as assessed by sphincter pressures, length and the recto-anal inhibitory reflex did not reveal any difference between the groups and normal controls; similarly anal sensation and rectal compliance were normal. However, those with normal transit had a higher threshold of rectal sensation than controls (P less than 0.05). Slow transit patients failed to show a postprandial increase in rectosigmoid motility compared with controls (P less than 0.05). Whilst the majority failed to inhibit the external sphincter on bearing down, half of those with normal transit produced either partial or complete inhibition. Both groups were able to increase the anorectal angle on straining. Twenty-two normal transit patients had abnormal perineal descent compared with controls (P less than 0.0005). Patients with perineal descent exhibited abnormal rectal morphology. Rectal intussusception was observed in 13 of 35 evacuation proctograms. On the basis of the data presented, we could not justify internal sphincterotomy of puborectalis division. Our policy in severe slow transit
constipation
was to offer colectomy and ileorectal anastomosis. In five out of seven to date, a successful result has been achieved. Eight patients with rectal
intussusception
have undergone an abdominal rectopexy with significant improvement in three. In our hands, the evacuation proctogram and transit studies were the most useful preoperative investigations.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and surgical management of intractable constipation. 376 60
Rectal prolapse occurs mostly in the geriatric female patient and can be a very disabling condition. The etiology is
intussusception
of the rectosigmoid secondary to excessive and prolonged straining. Medical therapy for this disease process is not helpful and patients will require a surgical procedure. The two best surgical procedures for the correction of rectal prolapse are low anterior resection of the rectosigmoid and proctopexy. A few patients who are unfit for laparotomy may require the Thiersch Wire procedure. Two unresolved problems after surgical therapy are continuing
constipation
and incontinence.
Constipation
is treated by dietary measures, stool softeners, and periodic enemas. Laxatives are to be discouraged. Incontinence in patients with rectal prolapse improves in most patients after a procedure to correct the prolapse. In those patients in which incontinence persists, no form of therapy has been found to be uniformly successful.
...
PMID:Rectal prolapse. 383 Mar 77
Distal bowel evacuation was studied by cinedefecography in 85 women with obstinate
constipation
, tenesmus, and incomplete evacuation in whom a diagnosis of internal rectal
intussusception
was clinically suspect. Sixty-five patients showed radiographic evidence of
intussusception
--mostly of the distal rectum, without rectosacral separation. Patients with distal
intussusception
who did not respond to nonoperative measures were treated by Delorme's transrectal excision with excellent results. Internal rectal
intussusception
is a real and demonstrable entity which may be symptomatically disabling and whose documentation may be integral to effective and anatomically specific treatment. The syndromes of perineal descent, solitary rectal ulcer, levator syndrome and so-called recurrent hemorrhoids may be diagnostic intermediaries in the evolution of internal rectal
intussusception
.
...
PMID:Anatomic specificity in the diagnosis and treatment of internal rectal prolapse. 405 93
The presentation of
intussusception
in children in Zaria, Nigeria has been studied with the aim of identifying any features that may differentiate it from that which obtains in temperate countries. Our data reveal no difference in age of peak incidence, sex ratio, absence of preceding upper respiratory infection or lack of significant seasonal variation. However, there is an unusually high incidence (41%) of caecocolic
intussusception
. It is believed that this may account for other observed features, such as the low occurrence of
constipation
and other evidence of intestinal obstruction, and the relatively high incidence of "painless"
intussusception
and sub-acute or chronic
intussusception
. Twenty-nine per cent of the patients had only one or two of the usual diagnostic features of the disease and this contributed to delayed diagnosis. In all but two patients the condition was idiopathic and there was no evidence to implicate bacterial enteritis or parasitic infestation in the aetiology of the disease.
...
PMID:Tropical paediatric intussusception--is it a different disease entity? 618 75
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