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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The current communication presents a simple technique for treatment of complete rectal prolapse (CRP). The study included 28 patients presenting with CRP (mean age, 36.4 years; 4 children 2-12 years; 17 female and 11 males). Fourteen patients had fecal incontinence. With the patient under general anesthesia in lithotomy position, the prolapsed rectum was pulled outside the anal canal, the mucosa was cauterized in vertical lines and the exposed muscle layer was plicated by 2/0 coated Vicryl sutures. Posterior levatorplasty was done in 14 adult patients in whom the length of prolapsed segment was more than 10 cm and who were incontinent due to a wide levator hiatus. The postoperative follow up was 31.6+/-14.8 months (mean+/-SD). Five had postoperative mucosal prolapse and one had recurrence 3 months of operation. Mucosal plication was performed for the five patients and the operation was redone for the recurrent patient. Fecal impaction, stricture and fistula formation were not encountered. The technique is simple, easy and with minimal complications.
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PMID:Cauterization-plication operation in the treatment of complete rectal prolapse. 1207 42

Patients who undergo surgery because of genital prolapse and coexisting stress incontinence can be treated by a combination of surgical procedures via a unified route. We performed a retrospective study among 47 patients to compare micturition, defecation and prolapse symptoms after surgery, as well as duration of hospital stay and complication rate between patients who underwent a unified vaginal or abdominal surgical correction. All patients were treated between January 1995 and December 1997 in the University Medical Center Utrecht or St Antonius Hospital Nieuwegein, The Netherlands. Abdominal surgery was associated with a higher prevalence of difficulty in bladder emptying (relative risk (RR) 2.3 (95% CI 1.4-8.4)), fecal incontinence (RR 3.4, CI 1.1-10.7) and soiling (OR 2.8, CI 1.2-6.2), as well as with a longer postoperative hospital stay (8.6 vs 7.3 days) and a higher complication rate (25.0% vs. 11.4%) than vaginal surgery. These results suggest that a unified vaginal surgical correction of genital prolapse and coexisting stress incontinence appears to be preferable to a unified abdominal surgical correction.
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PMID:Abdominal versus vaginal approach for the management of genital prolapse and coexisting stress incontinence. 1218 27

The use of circular staplers for the treatment of haemorrhoids is a new technique that makes for better correction of the physiopathology of the condition, affords greater patient comfort and reduces health-care expenditure. This technique, which was invented by A. Longo in 1993, pulls up the haemorrhoidal cushions into their anatomical position, reduces or avoids postoperative pain, sparing the sensitive fibres of the anal canal, avoids anal canal stenosis and is not complicated by faecal incontinence. The authors present their experience in 41 patients affected by symptomatic haemorrhoidal prolapse and treated with a mucosal rectal prolapsectomy using a circular stapler. Each patient was followed up for 6 months to assess the incidence of complications and the degree of patient satisfaction. The results were compared with those reported in the literature, obtained using the Milligan-Morgan procedure. The Longo technique, which can be performed in the one-day surgery setting, allows very good relief of postoperative pain, rapid functional recovery and an early return to work, with a saving in health-care expenditure as compared with conventional treatment.
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PMID:[Advantages of surgical treatment of hemorrhoids with mechanical sutures]. 1261 32

The aims of surgery in rectal prolapse are various: reducing the prolapse, preventing relapse, clearing up incontinence and avoiding constipation. Among several technical options available, anterior rectopexy would appear to be the most suitable for achieving these aims. A retrospective clinical study was conducted in 32 patients operated on from January 1996 to June 1999. For patient recruitment, the preoperative examinations were clinical evaluation, barium enema, anorectal manometry, and urodynamic tests. Surgical procedures were Orr-Loygue rectopexy in 29 cases and Ripstein rectopexy in 3 cases. A sigmoidectomy was also performed in 9 cases and a Burch cystopexy in 4 cases. Early results are available for all patients; only 29 have been evaluated after a mean follow-up of 47 months (range: 30-72). Rectal tenesmus, faecal incontinence and urinary incontinence improved in all cases. Constipation cleared up in 9 cases after a complementary sigmoidectomy; in 15 of the remaining 20 patients constipation persisted or developed. Indications for surgery for rectal prolapse must be considered with caution. The good results of anterior rectopexy depend on correct surgical technique and prevention of septic and pelvic complications. Sigmoidectomy does not increase the morbility rate. A planned colic resection in patients with delayed transit would prevent postoperative constipation. The good results are stable even over long-term follow-up periods. This procedure is also effective for the treatment of genital prolapses.
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PMID:[Rectal prolapse. Functional results after the Orr-Loygue's rectopexy technique]. 1287 76

Anal incontinence and constipation are not only physically and psychologically disabling symptoms but also a significant social and public health problem. The epidemiology of anal incontinence and constipation from community-bases remains largely unknown, especially in Asian women. This study is a continuation of a previous survey taken on the epidemiology of urinary incontinence and overactive bladder in Taiwanese women by using a second questionnaire (correlation coefficient for symptoms, r=0.87; P<0.05). We evaluated the prevalence and potential risk factors associated with anal incontinence and constipation in the general population. Of the 1,584 (2.92%) women sampled, 1,253 (79.1%) were successfully interviewed at home. The prevalence of fecal incontinence and flatus incontinence was 35 (2.8%) and 107 (8.6%), respectively. There were 306 (24.5%) participants who reported constipation. However, according to the current medical criteria for constipation, the prevalence of constipation was only 2.7%. The prevalence of anal incontinence did not increase after the age of 65 years (9.7%, including 3.5% of elderly women with fecal incontinence and 6.2% of elderly women with flatus incontinence). The prevalence of constipation significantly increased in the women aged 65 years and over (self-reported prevalence: 32.4%, fitted in medical criteria for constipation: 8.3%). Our results demonstrated that constipation shares some of the same risk factors, namely, symptoms of uterovaginal prolapse, prior gynecologic surgery, and overactive bladder that predispose women to the occurrence of anal incontinence. The questionnaire needs a higher discriminatory capacity, and a longitudinal study should be conducted to clarify this conflict further.
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PMID:Prevalence and correlations of anal incontinence and constipation in Taiwanese women. 1459 11

Diarrhea and constipation are known risk factors for fecal incontinence. This report reviews how to diagnose and medically treat patients with chronic diarrhea, chronic constipation with overflow incontinence, and incontinence resulting from rectal mucosal prolapse secondary to hemorrhoids. Antidiarrheal agents (including loperamide, diphenoxylate, and difenoxin) and the tricyclic antidepressant amitriptyline improve continence in patients with diarrhea-associated incontinence. Other antidiarrheal agents are under investigation. The mechanism is believed to be decreased intestinal motility and stool frequency resulting in more formed stools. Increases in anal canal resting pressure may also contribute to improvement in continence. Adverse effects are constipation from excessive use. In addition to antidiarrheal drugs, fiber supplements may improve incontinence associated with diarrhea. Transient, benign cases of constipation usually respond to increasing fluid intake and dietary fiber, improving mobility, or eliminating the concurrent use of constipating drugs. For mild to moderate constipation, bulking agents, laxatives, and stool softeners are used cautiously so as not to excessively loosen stools and exacerbate anal incontinence. Laxatives have been shown to improve continence, possibly through the mechanism of eliminating fecal impaction. Prolapsing hemorrhoids may partially obstruct defecation and cause soilage from the passage of fecal material, mucus, or blood. With endoscopic banding, a ligator is attached to an endoscope and a tight band is placed around the enlarged vein, causing the hemorrhoid to thrombose.
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PMID:Medical management of fecal incontinence. 1497 39

During the last 10 Years, the cesarean section (CS) rate was increased despite of the recommendations of the World Health Organization to keep it below 10-15%. The purpose of this review of the literature was to demonstrate how the concept of CS rate limitation has become obsolete. The increase in the CS rate is mainly justified by the decrease in maternal mortality and morbidity following elective CS: surgery-related risks have decreased and the confusion that was made between the risks of vaginal delivery and those of trial of labor has to be clarified to show that maternal mortality and morbidity are not increased by elective CS. However, instrumental delivery and CS during labor remain two situations at high risks both for the mother and her fetus. There is also an association between the increase in the CS rate and the decrease in perinatal mortality and morbidity, but this effect would only become clinically significant after a dramatic increase in the CS rate: this is the preventile principle of "marginal death". Numerous articles have been published reporting on the effects of vaginal delivery for the pelvic floor: urinary incontinence, pelvic organ prolapse, and especially fecal incontinence. All these publications concluded that CS has a protective effect. The rising duty to provide information to patients in high risk obstetrical situations such as a history of CS also contributes to the overall increase in CS rate mainly through the elective CS rate. Indeed, when faced with the alternative choices of potentially severe complications either for themselves or their child, women are likely to choose what appears to be the safest mode of delivery for their child and thus to opt for a CS. Finally, widespread delivery of information to the patients about trial of labor itself and the risks of vaginal delivery is the first step towards a "principle of preference", which consists in giving an important place to the patient's choice in the decision-making process, and thus to recognize her right to ask for an elective CS.
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PMID:[Evaluation of cesarean rate: a necessary progress in modern obstetrics]. 1548 Feb 87

Leading symptoms of anorectal malformation in the neonatal period are abdominal distention, non-passage of meconium and constipation. When present, vomiting is a late symptom. In a study in Calabar, Nigeria, patients were observed to present late, and teenage mothers in rural communities were mostly affected. Female neonates were affected more than males in a ratio of 1.5:1. Classification into low and high abnormality was adopted and proved practical in terms of identification of the pathology and treatment of the lesion. Patients with low abnormality (N = 24, 44.4%) were treated with perineal cut-down, while those with high abnormality (55.6%) had initial palliative colostomy before a definitive abdominal perineal pull-through procedure. Faecal incontinence (13%), anal stenosis (11.1%), constipation (7.4%) and colostomy prolapse (5.6%) were noted to be associated complications. Poverty and ignorance were noted to be the main factors affecting treatment outcome. A concerted public enlightenment campaign is therefore required.
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PMID:Results of treatment in children with anorectal malformations in Calabar, Nigeria. 1553 16

Pelvic organ prolapse is a common and growing condition for which women seek help and frequently undergo surgical management. Prolapse of the posterior vaginal wall, alone or in combination with other compartment defects, can be a challenge for the pelvic surgeon. A clear understanding of the normal anatomy, interactions of the connective tissue and muscular supports of the pelvis, and the relationship or lack of relationship between anatomy and function is required. Vaginal support defects occur with and without symptoms, and many of the symptoms attributed to pelvic organ prolapse can result from other causes. Pelvic pressure, the need to splint the perineum to defecate, impaired sexual relations, difficult defecation, and fecal incontinence are some of the symptoms that have been correlated with rectoceles. Whether the prolapse is the cause of these symptoms or is a result of straining and stretching of support tissues in women with defecation disorders is still unknown. We will present the current literature on these relationships and what evaluations are useful when caring for a woman with a rectocele and defecation disorders. Either pessaries or surgery can be used for treating rectoceles. Several surgical techniques have been described, including transvaginal, transanal, abdominal, and the use of graft materials to treat both anatomical defects and functional symptoms. The success, rationale, and complications of each approach, including anatomic cure, impact on defecation, and sexual function, are presented.
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PMID:Evaluation and treatment of women with rectocele: focus on associated defecatory and sexual dysfunction. 1557 6

Urinary incontinence, as well as additional pelvic floor damage, such as third and fourth degree muscular lacerations, as well as fecal incontinence, genital prolapse or dyspareunia, result from obstetric trauma, and are generally linked to the first delivery. The purpose of this study is to analyze, from a physiotherapeutic point of view, and therefore from the perspective of muscular physiology and biomechanics, why this damage occurs, while studying the birth process and the way it is currently performed in most hospitals in our country. Analysis of the birth process and, in short, of the different types of positions used for the first and second stage of labor, as well as of the care provided for women in the puerperium, leads us to propose a global prevention strategy to be carried out in three stages: --Ante-natal prevention: specific preparation of the pelvic floor and abdominal musculature during pregnancy, using massage techniques and manual stretching of the perineum. In addition, the pregnant woman learns these positions and methods of pushing, which makes the first and second stage of labour easier. An osteopathic treatment of the pelvis joints is performed in order to facilitate their mobility or to liberate blockades, if they exist. --Prevention during labour: During this stage, physiology is respected and manual, position-based and breathing techniques are implemented in order to enhance the protection of the baby and of the pelvic floor. --Postpartum prevention: The action is focused on the pelvic floor, through diaphragmatic and abdominal exercises or postures and, if necessary, osteopathic treatment in the early puerperium, in order to facilitate the correct involution of all soft tissues and the pelvic joints involved in labor. Early specific physiotherapeutic treatment will be proposed for women with functional pathology six weeks after delivery.
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PMID:[Urinary incontinence and other pelvic floor damages: ethilogy and prevention strategies]. 1581 Jul 16


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