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

Over 15 years 108 patients with either rectal prolapse or internal rectal procidentia were treated by the Ripstein operation. Postoperative evaluation was possible in 97 patients (mean observation time, 6.9 years). The mortality rate was 2.8 percent, and surgical complications occurred in an additional 3.7 percent. The recurrence rate was 4.1 percent. Preoperative and postoperative functional analysis was possible in 92 patients. The proportion of continent patients increased from 33 percent preoperatively to 72 percent postoperatively. Defecation difficulties increased from 27 percent to 43 percent following surgery, and were a major cause of dissatisfaction.
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PMID:Results of the Ripstein operation in the treatment of rectal prolapse and internal rectal procidentia. 379 66

Twenty-one patients were reviewed five to 12 years after silicone rubber perianal suture for rectal prolapse. Sixteen patients (76 percent) were continent with control of prolapse and two patients (9 percent) suffered only from occasional prolapse or incontinence. Rebanding for silicone cutout or fracture was required in four patients and a second rebanding operation was needed in two. Silicone rubber perianal suture for rectal prolapse stands the test of time and might be recommended for more widespread use in younger patients.
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PMID:Late results of silicone rubber perianal suture for rectal prolapse. 380 26

Rectal prolapse is a frequent complication after pull-through operations for high imperforate anus. Mucosal prolapse causes soiling, occasional bleeding, and pain. Simple resection of the redundant mucosa is unsatisfactory and leads to frequent recurrences or strictures. In 1982, Millard and Rowe reported a technique designed to correct rectal prolapse using two perineal flaps, thus providing a skin-lined anal canal. We have operated on two patients using the same technique. A three-flap anoplasty was used in nine other patients. With an average follow-up of 13 months, none of out patients presented recurrence of the prolapse or a significant stenosis. This procedure is safe and physiologically sound. The skin-lined anal canal provides some sensation where it is lacking. The functional and esthetic results are gratifying and we are now using the three-flap anoplasty as a primary procedure in the correction of high imperforate anus.
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PMID:Multiple-flap anoplasty in the treatment of rectal prolapse after pull-through operations for imperforate anus. 381 97

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.
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PMID:Rectal prolapse. 383 Mar 77

A 7-year-old burro jack was examined because of recurrent rectal prolapse and severe cough. The prolapse was reduced manually and a cough associated with bronchopneumonia responded to antimicrobial therapy. The rectal prolapse recurred and again was reduced manually. During exploratory celiotomy a cystic calculus was identified and removed. Severe protracted cough and cystic calculus were thought to be contributing factors to recurrent rectal prolapse in this burro.
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PMID:Rectal prolapse and cystic calculus in a burro. 389 61

Most of the surgical procedures proposed for the treatment of fecal incontinence associated with prolapse are associated with considerable morbidity and mortality. We used a modified Thiersch procedure with a Silastic mesh implant (Dow-Corning 501-3) on a series of 12 patients over a period of 2 1/2 years. Nine patients obtained excellent control of the prolapse and incontinence. Only one patient was dissatisfied with her operation. The excellent results reported by other authors using a Silastic mesh implant have been reproduced in this small series of patients. This relatively safe and simple operation may still be the procedure of choice for fecal incontinence and rectal prolapse.
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PMID:Modified Thiersch procedure with silastic mesh implant: a simple solution for fecal incontinence and severe prolapse. 395 40

Scleroderma of the colon is commonly associated with constipation, as was the case in a 70-year-old woman with rectal prolapse described by the authors. The chronic constipation in this patient may have been the cause of her rectal prolapse, but the onset of the prolapse and scleroderma at about the same time suggest that the scleroderma may have been a causative factor. A Ripstein repair of the prolapse was carried out. The authors discuss some of the complications of colonic scleroderma, which include megacolon, transverse and sigmoid colonic volvulus, telangiectasia, stenosis and diverticula and stercoral ulceration.
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PMID:Rectal prolapse in scleroderma: case report and review of the colonic complications of scleroderma. 397 Dec 25

This is a retrospective study evaluating 179 patients with complete rectal prolapse operated on at the University of Minnesota affiliated hospitals from 1953 to 1983 with no mortality. One hundred and two of 138 patients who underwent abdominal proctopexy and sigmoid resection were followed from six months to 30 years with a recurrence rate of 1.9 percent. Twenty-two of the 33 patients who underwent perineal rectosigmoidectomy were followed from six months to three years with no recurrence. Nine patients who underwent abdominal proctopexy and subtotal colectomy because of colonic inertia associated with procidentia were followed from one to six years with no recurrence. Patient interviews revealed that 72 to 80 percent considered their results as excellent or good. Incontinence or persistent constipation caused the remaining patients to consider their results fair or poor, despite anatomic correction of the prolapse. Abdominal proctopexy and sigmoid resection was more likely to result in improvement of continence than was perineal rectosigmoidectomy.
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PMID:The management of procidentia. 30 years' experience. 397 14

Defecography is a technique of examining the rectum and anal canal in which the patient is studied while sitting down rather than recumbent and recordings are obtained both at rest and during straining. The authors describe their findings in 83 patients with dyschezia. Defecation was normal in 28 patients. Prolapse of the anal mucosa was seen in 13 patients and internal procidentia in 23, 12 of whom also had intussusception manifested as rectal prolapse. A deep rectogenital fossa associated with an enterocele was seen in 16 patients; 13 had a proctocele, while fecal retention was seen in 5. Descent of the pelvic floor and changes in the angle between the rectum and anal canal were assessed. The authors recommend defecography as a more physiological means of assessing rectal dysfunction.
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PMID:Defecography. 397 18

The use of silastic perianal rings to control rectal prolapse in the elderly has been reviewed. Forty-one patients were treated over a 6 year period by a total of 52 operations. Their mean age was 80 years and there was no operative mortality. Prolapse was adequately controlled in 71 per cent of patients, and a further three patients had no recurrence despite failure and removal of the ring. The results of this procedure are inferior to those obtained by abdominal operations for rectal prolapse, but deserve serious consideration in those elderly patients who may be unfit for laparotomy.
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PMID:Treatment of rectal prolapse by sphincteric support using silastic rods. 401 20


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