Unexpected results of a nationwide, treatment-independent assessment of fecal incontinence in patients with anorectal anomalies
Autor: | Stuart Hosie, Ekkehart Jenetzky, Dominik Schmidt, Karsten Jablonka, Stefanie Maerzheuser, Nicole Schwarzer, Nadine Zwink, Heiko Reutter, Enrika Bartels, Eberhard Schmiedeke, Christian Lorenz, Sabine Grasshoff-Derr, Stefan Holland-Cunz |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Pediatrics medicine.medical_specialty Constipation Adolescent Anorectal anomalies Anal Canal Anus Imperforate Young Adult Germany Surveys and Questionnaires Pediatric surgery medicine Fecal incontinence Humans In patient Registries Young adult Child business.industry General surgery Rectum General Medicine Patient counseling Middle Aged Anus medicine.disease Anorectal Malformations medicine.anatomical_structure Child Preschool Pediatrics Perinatology and Child Health Surgery Female medicine.symptom business Fecal Incontinence |
Zdroj: | Pediatric surgery international. 28(8) |
ISSN: | 1437-9813 |
Popis: | To determine the anorectal function in patients with anorectal malformations (ARM) in order to facilitate patient counseling and follow-up.Data were collected by the German network for urorectal malformations (CURE-Net) according to the International Krickenbeck consensus. Questionnaires on bowel function and a defecation protocol were completed by the families/patients. The clinical findings were assessed from the patients' clinical records.Two hundred and ninety-seven patients with ARM were assessed, 175 patients gave complete data on continence, 52 of them were excluded due to mental retardation, age, and earlier type of pullthrough. Complete continence was found in 27 %, perineal fistula in 40 %, rectourethral/vesical in 10 %, vestibular in 24 %, cloaca in 0 %. Krickenbeck grade 1 soiling: 42 %, grade 2 and 3: 31 %. Forty-nine percent of the incontinent patients practiced bowel management, reaching continence in 19 %. The statement of constipation (67 %) was validated with the last clinical findings, showing coprostasis in 46 %, "Not suffering constipation" was confirmed in 61 % and falsified in 29 %.ARM patients in Germany, as assessed by independent researchers, show a high rate of fecal incontinence and insufficiently treated constipation. Parents should be counseled accordingly and motivated to engage in consequent follow-up. Intensified efforts in the conservative treatment of constipation and fecal incontinence are crucial to improvement. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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