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

The solitary rectal ulcer syndrome is an infrequent entity consisting of a rectal lesion, caused by straining during defecation; it is characterized by specific histological changes. The condition is most frequent in adults between 30 and 50 years of age, but a few pediatric cases have been reported. Five patients (4 boys) are presented. All suffered from moderate rectal bleeding, straining, tenesmus and mucous discharge. One of them had clinical and endoscopic evidence of rectal prolapse. On defecography all children showed failure of pelvic floor relaxation during straining. Endoscopic evaluation showed single or multiple ulcers in four patients and a nodular fibrotic lesion in one. The histopathology of the rectal mucosa revealed replacement of the stroma of the lamina propria by collagen, lack of orientation of smooth muscle fibers and considerable hyperthopy of the muscularis mucosae. Medical treatment was satisfactory in four patients, one case required transabdominal rectopexy for relief of his symptoms. The most appropriate form of treatment has not been determined, but surgery should be used when prolapse is a prominent clinical feature. Greater awareness of this condition will lead to more frequent diagnosis.
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PMID:[Solitary rectal ulcer syndrome]. 184 44

We report 33 patients with the solitary rectal ulcer syndrome seen between 1975 and 1982. Twenty-four were women and the median age was 32 years. The principal symptoms were bleeding (89 per cent), chronic constipation (64 per cent), rectal pain (42 per cent), tenesmus (42 per cent), and mucous discharge (45 per cent). Twenty-eight patients gave a history of straining (85 per cent). A full-thickness rectal prolapse was present in six patients, an anterior rectal prolapse was observed in 11, and 12 patients had clinical evidence of perineal descent. Defecation was only possible by digital evaluation in six women, and three male patients were passive homosexuals. Manometric studies were performed on 16 patients; eight patients were unable to tolerate rectal distention with 200 cc of air and impaired rectal sensation was present in two. Rectal distention was associated with bursts of involuntary external sphincter activity in three patients, and the distention reflex was absent in six, despite normal ganglia on rectal biopsy. In only four patients was there electromyographic evidence of contraction of the puborectalis during attempted defecation. Fourteen patients were treated by rectopexy; healing of the ulcer occurred in five of six with a full-thickness prolapse compared with only two of eight without a complete prolapse.
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PMID:Clinical and manometric features of the solitary rectal ulcer syndrome. 646 84

Urethral prolapse denotes the complete circular eversion of the urethral mucosa through the external meatus. Two different entities exist: premenarcheal and menopausal urethral prolapse. Premenarcheal prolapse is predominantly asymptomatic and is usually brought to medical attention by vaginal bleeding. Trauma and medical conditions predisposing a patient to increased abdominal pressure are associated with prolapse in children. The menopausal group seeks medical attention primary because of the severity of urinary symptoms, ie, nocturia, urgency, tenesmus, dysuria, and frequency. Therapy for both groups has been traditionally accomplished by surgical manipulation-excision, surgical ligation, cautery, fulguration, and cryosurgery. The authors treated 5 premenarcheal female children with antibiotics, estrogen cream, and sitz baths for 2 weeks. In all the patients prolapse was resolved. The results, with follow-up for 4 to 12 months without recurrence, suggest that urethral prolapse in children can be managed without surgical intervention.
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PMID:Medical treatment of urethral prolapse in children. 707 52

Occult rectal prolapse is a condition of young adults which causes problems in diagnosis. Symptoms consist of tenesmus and the passage of blood and mucus associated with constipation and straining at stool. The rectal prolapse often remains unrecognized for a long time because demonstration of the prolapse is difficult. There are characteristic changes in the rectum on clinical examination and these should alert the clinician to the diagnosis. Treatment of the prolapse relieves the symptoms.
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PMID:The occult rectal prolapse syndrome. 741 57

Internal procidentia or internal rectal prolapse (intussusception) still represents a therapeutic problem: it may be a secondary phenomenon in a primary functional disorder, or it may itself represent the cause of outlet obstruction amenable to cure by prolapse operation. Over a 10-year period 49 patients underwent surgery due to severe symptoms and resistance to conservative treatment. Symptoms and findings were obstructive constipation (65%), tenesmus and pain (55%), mucus discharge and bleeding (26%), and incontinence (24%). 12 (24%) of the patients had a solitary rectal ulcer syndrome. The operative procedure consisted in rectal mobilization, elevation, rectopexy, with rectosigmoid resection in 45 patients. 1-9 (mean 3) years after the operation 10 patients (21%) had a poor functional outcome, though the intussusception was cured in 48 patients. A favorable result was most frequently noticed in patients with incontinence, incipient external prolapse, and also in those with a solitary rectal ulcer syndrome. 35% of the patients with obstruction, severe pain and normal continence did not benefit from the operative procedure.
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PMID:[Internal rectal prolapse: therapy outcome and current status]. 883 Mar 95

Anorectal disorders are commonly encountered in the practice of emergency medicine. Most can be diagnosed and treated in the emergency department setting. Almost all anorectal disorders once diagnosed and treated in the emergency department need appropriate follow-up to ensure adequacy of treatment, for further possible diagnostic procedures (e.g., endoscopy, biopsy), or for definitive treatment. Hemorrhoids are the most prevalent anorectal disorder and are the most common cause of hematochezia. Treatment is dependent on the degree of hemorrhoid prolapse and symptoms. Most cases can be treated by conservative medical treatment (e.g., dietary changes, sitz baths) or nonsurgical procedures (e.g., rubber band liagation, infrared coagulation). Surgical excision of symptomatic thrombosed external hemorrhoids is indicated if within 48 to 72 hours of pain onset. Anal fissures are one of the most common causes of anorectal pain. They are most frequently idiopathic, and most are located in the posterior midline of the anal canal. Most anal fissures are adequately treated by a medical approach using sitz baths, stool softeners, and analgesics. If the anal fissure becomes chronic and is not responsive to medical therapy, a lateral sphincterotomy of the internal anal sphincter is the surgical procedure of choice. Pharmacologic treatment (botulinum toxin or nitroglycerin ointment) to decrease internal anal sphincter tone has shown promise in the treatment of anal fissure. Anorectal abscesses are categorized into four types: perianal, ischiorectal, intersphincteric, and supralevator. Most are idiopathic and contain mixed aerobic-anaerobic pathogens. Fistula formation varies from 25% to 50% and is much more common with gut-derived organisms (e.g., E. coli, B. fragilis). Definitive treatment for an anorectal abscess is timely surgical incision and drainage to prevent more serious complications (e.g., serious infection, extension of the abscess). Anal carcinomas are infrequent, the majority of them being squamous cell or epidermoid carcinomas. The emergency physician must maintain a high index of suspicion and obtain a biopsy of suspicious lesions in order not to miss the diagnosis of a cancer. The most common presenting complaint of anal tumors is rectal bleeding. Combination chemotherapy and radiotherapy have shown promising results in the treatment of anal canal tumors. Bacterial, viral, and protozoal infections can be transmitted to the anorectum via anoreceptive intercourse. Such infections must be considered when a patient presents with rectal pain or discharge, tenesmus, or rectal or perineal ulcers. Proctosigmoidoscopy and rectal cultures may be necessary to determine the cause. Potential rectal complications of HIV infection include infectious diarrhea, acyclovir-resistant strains of HSV2, Kaposi's sarcoma, lymphoma, and squamous cell carcinoma. Rectal injuries may result from penetrating or blunt trauma, iatrogenic injuries, or foreign bodies. Rectal injury should be suspected when a patient presents with low abdominal, pelvic, or perineal pain or blood per rectum after sustaining trauma or undergoing an endoscopic or surgical procedure. Tetanus prophylaxis, intravenous antibiotics, and surgical intervention are indicated in all but superficial rectal tears.
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PMID:Anorectal disorders. 892 68

The authors report their experience in the treatment of hemorrhoids by rubber band ligation according to Barron's modified technique which foresees that the ligation is performed thanks to the suction of the hemorrhoidal node through the shaft of the band applicator connected with an aspirator. Eighty-four patients underwent consecutively this treatment over a 18-month period; all were performed with a minimum follow-up of 6 months. Forty male patients (mean age 46.6 years) showed symptoms lasting since 9 years. Forty-four female patients (mean age 42.6 years) showed such pathology since 8.9 years. 70.2% of the patients were classified as III stage of disease, 19% II stage and 10.7% I stage. Thirty-four patients had anal pain, 49 bleeding, 5 anemia, 21 thrombosis of the hemorrhoidal plexus, 54 prolapse of the ano-rectal mucosa. These symptoms and signs were present in most of the patients contemporaneously. Three patients had previously received rubber band ligations, 4 hemorrhoidectomy, 1 sclerotherapy and 1 rubber band ligation and sclerotherapy. In the whole we performed 285 sessions and 304 rubber band ligations. Each treatment consisted of 3.4 sessions and 3.6 rubber band ligations. Recovery was achieved with only one session in 9 patients; 66.7% of them showed 1st degree disease. Multiple sessions were necessary in patients with advanced disease degree; 100% at stage II and 94.9% at stage III. Sixty-five patients did not refer immediate and long-term significant complications. The remaining patients complained during the first hours about heavy feeling and/or tenesmus and two, 2 weeks after the end of treatment, showed bleeding episodes, which cleared up spontaneously. In 5 cases it was necessary, during follow-up, to carry out a completion rubber band ligation and in 3 we performed trimming surgery at the out-patients' department by resection of the exceeding skin and anal mucosa. The technique enables to achieve results just as valid as those of traditional methods in the treatment of hemorrhoidal pathology with the advantage that it can be performed in an out-patient's department, it does not need local anesthesia, it enables the patient to immediately return to his normal working activity and, restricted to the observation period (6- and 12-month follow-up) it allows a satisfactory control of the disease.
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PMID:[Ambulatory treatment of hemorrhoidal pathology with elastic bands according to a modified Barron technique]. 957 46

Seventeen cases of spontaneous, partial or total vaginal rupture, in pregnant ewes, involving the dislocation and herniation of the intestines and uterus, were studied. Four of them also had a uterine torsion, and three of these recovered after treatment. In the remaining 13 cases the condition of the uterus was unknown. The lesion always consisted of a dorsolateral tear in the vagina with a partial or total perforation of the wall close to the uterine cervix. The affected animals were all in normal body condition. Their average age was just under five years, and most were carrying twins. Most cases occurred approximately one week before expected lambing. None of the cases was observed to have a vaginal prolapse before the vaginal rupture. Histological examination of one case revealed scar formation in the vaginal wall close to the rupture, which appeared to be due to an earlier inflammatory process or injury. The circulatory disturbance in the reproductive organs caused by the uterine torsion potentially weakens the vaginal wall. This weakness, in combination with excessive tenesmus resulting from increased tension in the uterine ligaments, and in some cases possibly with a lower vaginal resistance due to previous scarring, may be of aetiological significance in spontaneous vaginal rupture.
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PMID:Spontaneous vaginal rupture in pregnant ewes. 1002 83

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

Frequently, vaginal fold prolapse is the protrusion of edematous vaginal tissue into and through the opening of the vulva occurring during proestrus and estrus stages of the sexual cycle. True vaginal prolapse may occur near parturition, as the concentration of serum progesterone declines and the concentration of serum oestrogen increases. In the bitch, this type of true vaginal prolapse is a very rare condition. This short communication describes a 5-year-old female, cross-breed dog in moderate condition, weighing 33 kg, with distocia and true vaginal prolapse. Abdominal palpation and transabdominal ultrasonography revealed live and dead foetuses in the uterine horns. One dead and four live fetuses were removed from uterus by cesarean section. The ovariohysterectomy was performed after repositioning the vaginal wall with a combination of traction from within the abdomen and external manipulation through the vulva. Re-occurrence of a vaginal prolapse was not observed and the bitch recovered completely after the surgical therapy. Compared to other vaginal disorders, vaginal prolapse is an uncommon condition in the bitch. In the present case, extreme tenesmus arising from distocia may have predisposed to the vaginal prolapse. The cause of dystocia was probably the disposition of the first foetus. We concluded that the vaginal prolapse was the result of dystocia in the present case.
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PMID:True vaginal prolapse in a bitch. 1712 56


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