A New Method of Assessing Anal Sphincter Integrity Using Inverted Vectormanometry
Autor: | Geetinder Kaur, Graeme S. Duthie, Angela Gardiner |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Manometry Anal Canal law.invention law Endoanal ultrasound Pressure medicine Humans Fecal incontinence Aged Ultrasonography Aged 80 and over Anus Diseases business.industry Urethral sphincter Ultrasound Gastroenterology General Medicine Anatomy Middle Aged Anal canal medicine.anatomical_structure Pressure measurement Sphincter Defecation Female medicine.symptom business Constipation Fecal Incontinence Muscle Contraction |
Zdroj: | Diseases of the Colon & Rectum. 49:1160-1166 |
ISSN: | 0012-3706 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10350-006-0556-8 |
Popis: | Vectorgraphy as an integrated mapping of radial pressure profiles of the anal canal has been used to attempt identification of pressure-related defects with doubtful reliability since vectorgraphs bear no resemblance to endoanal ultrasound scans at similar levels in the anal canal. This study aimed to devise a technique to enable vectorgraphy to be more representative of sphincter function and integrity. Vectormanometry was performed in 50 patients with anorectal disorders using an Arndorfer pneumohydraulic system. “Normal” three-dimensional manometric images of each 0.5 cm of the anal sphincter were computer-generated by plotting anal pressures at rest and during squeeze radially around a central zero axis. The graphs were replotted with zero at the periphery and maximal anal pressure at the center. Both this (“inverted”) and “normal” vectorgraphs were compared with endoanal ultrasound images at similar levels, assessing both internal and external anal sphincters. Standard vectormanometry produced excellent pictures of pressures throughout the anal canal; the anatomy however bore no resemblance to the pictures produced by endoanal ultrasound. The inverted vectographs showed a much better correlation with endoanal ultrasound at each 0.5-mm level of the anal canal, for both squeeze pressure graphs and external sphincter correlations and for resting pressure graphs and internal sphincter correlations. Accurate assessment of sphincter integrity is not possible when interpreting the vectormanometry graphs in the current format; however, inverted vectorgraphy gives good correlations with endoanal ultrasound and provides combined functional (pressure measurement) and anatomic (three-dimensional profile) information regarding the anal canal. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |