Anorectal function following coloanal sleeve anastomosis for chronic radiation injury to the rectum
- 1 April 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in British Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 73 (4) , 285-289
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bjs.1800730413
Abstract
Anorectal manometry and electrophysiological studies of the pelvic floor were performed in eight patients who had undergone anterior resection of the rectum with mucosal proctectomy and colo-anal sleeve anastomosis for radiation rectal injury. There is a severe reduction in the compliance of the neorectum and in the maximal tolerable volume. Maximum basal anal canal pressure and physiological sphincter length are also significantly reduced although the ‘squeeze’ pressure of the external anal sphincter and the latency of the pudendo-anal reflex were unaffected. Four patients had an absent rectosphincteric reflex, four patients involuntarily expelled the test balloon at the maximal tolerable volume during a proctometrogram and four patients demonstrated increased EMG activity of the pelvic floor on straining and on rectal distension. These abnormalities help to explain many of the patients' symptoms. Histological abnormalities of the myenteric plexus were a prominent feature in all the excised specimens and may be responsible for some of the functional abnormalities.Keywords
Funding Information
- Welcom Trust Research (12196 14 L)
- British Digestive Foundation
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reproducibility of the proctometrogram.Gut, 1986
- Correlation of clinical and manometric abnormalities of rectal function following chronic radiation injuryBritish Journal of Surgery, 1985
- Surgical Aspects of Intestinal Injury Due to Pelvic RadiotherapyAnnals of Surgery, 1985
- Parks' coloanal pull-through anastomosis for severe, complicated radiation proctitisDiseases of the Colon & Rectum, 1985
- Anorectal profilometry with the microtransducerBritish Journal of Surgery, 1984
- A trial of preoperative radiotherapy in the management of operable rectal cancerBritish Journal of Surgery, 1982
- Radiation Injury of the RectumAnnals of Surgery, 1981
- The surgical treatment of the radiation-damaged rectumBritish Journal of Surgery, 1981
- The modern enigma of radiation enteropathy: Sequelae and solutionsThe American Journal of Surgery, 1977
- Techniques for Very Low AnastomosisProceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1972