Repair of Rectal Prolapse

Abstract
Forty-eight patients with rectal prolapse were seen at Ochsner Clinic from 1955 to 1977. The charts of these patients were reviewed to assess the results of treatment and to evaluate a suggested association between rectal prolapse and solitary rectal ulcer syndrome. Since 1970 the Ripstein sling procedure has been used exclusively to treat those patients with rectal prolapse who are able to undergo a transabdominal procedure. We compared the results of this procedure with the ones formerly used: perineal (Altemeer), sigmoidectomy, and Thiersch procedures. Although the earlier operations for rectal prolapse were associated with either a high recurrence or a high complication rate, the Ripstein has both a low recurrence and a low morbidity rate: two patients had recurrence and two had the sling applied too tightly. The Ripstein procedure was shown to be an effective, safe procedure for repair of rectal prolapse, and the result was considered satisfactory by 20 of the 21 patients questioned. Regarding the association of rectal ulcer and rectal prolapse, we found that, although the symptoms of the solitary rectal ulcer syndrome and rectal prolapse are similar, they appear to represent a different response to the same stimulus, and the syndrome is relatively unabated by repair.

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