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Incontinence

From Surgopaedia

Involuntary leakage of faecal material in anyone over four years old.

Terminology

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  • Anal incontinence incorporates loss of flatus, faecal incontinence does not
  • Urge incontinence (aware, running to bathroom but don't make it - suggests external sphincter problem) vs passive incontinence (unaware of occurrence - suggests more a problem with internal sphincter)

Factors contributing to normal continence

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Mechanical/anatomical factors

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    • Anal sphincter
      • Internal - 70% of resting sphincter pressure, but only 40% after distension of the rectum
      • External - contributes via voluntary control
    • Anal vascular cushions - 10-20% of resting tone
    • Puborectalis muscle/anorectal angle which acts like a flap valve

Rectal/anal sensation

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    • Pudendal nerve (S2, 3, 4) innervates EAS
    • Pelvic branches (S3 and 4) innervate puborectalis
    • Rectal distension is transmitted along S2, 3, 4 PNS nerves
    • Recto-anal inhibitory reflex - when distended with stool, the internal sphincter relaxes, followed by reflexive contraction of EAS, creating a sensation of urgency. This is followed by pelvic floor relaxing, decreasing acuity of ano-rectal angle, and defecation (if appropriate). Voluntary contraction of the pelvic floor and EAS causes the sensation of urgency to subside as the rectum accommodates.
    • Anal sampling - as the IAS relaxes, a small amount of stool can be 'sampled' and moved down to anus, allowing for differentiation of gas and solid stool.

Rectal compliance

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    • Storage of stool to defer defecation

Stool consistency

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    • Especially important in patients with other functional problems

Aetiology

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Structural problems

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    • Anal sphincter disruption
      • Obstetric (most common) - trial non-operative options, then surgically repair or SNS
        • Prolonged second stage (pudendal nerve injury)
        • Actual passage of baby
        • Instruments
        • Often doesn't become symptomatic until post-menopause
      • Iatrogenic - fix underlying cause, then optimise medical management, consider SNS
        • LIS
        • Fistulotomy
        • Haemorrhoidectomy
        • Radiation
      • Anorectal disease - fix underlying cause - surgically
        • Rectal prolapse
          • Lead-point of prolapse acts like an intussusception, causing stretch of anal canal, and subsequent damage
        • Prolapsing internal haemorrhoids
    • Disruption of pelvic floor - surgically repair or SNS
      • Associated with ageing - diminished muscle bulk and strength
      • Excessive perineal descent - associated with denervation of the pelvic floor
      • Traumatic
        • Perineal impalement
        • Voluntary anoreceptive intercourse
        • Foreign bodies
        • Sexual abuse

Functional problems - bowel regime to prevent constipation

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    • Neurologic - loss of stool awareness and sensation, often leading to mega-rectum with overflow incontinence (requires faecal impaction)
      • Obstetric (pudendal nerve injury)
      • MS
      • CNS disease - spinal cord injury or tumour
      • Diabetes
      • CVA
    • Reduced rectal compliance - treat underlying cause
      • IBD
      • Radiation proctitis
      • Distal rectal cancer
      • Rectal surgery including pouches

Changes in stool characteristics - treat underlying cause

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    • Severe diarrhoea

Others - manage symptoms and in some cases stoma

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    • Physical mobility
    • Dementia
    • Intellectual disability

History

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  • Differentiate true incontinence from urgency/frequency
  • Solids/liquids/gas
  • Onset
  • Duration
  • Frequency
  • Amount
  • Type
  • Nocturnal episodes
  • Precipitating events
  • Awareness of incontinence
  • Consider neurologic cause (lower back/perianal pain, motor or sensory symptoms in extremities, urinary incontinence)
  • Prior anorectal surgery, pelvic irradiation, diabetes, neurologic disease
  • Obstetric history (number of vaginal deliveries, prolonged labour, use of forceps, lacerations)
  • Ask if tissue ever protrudes
  • St Mark's incontinence score
  • Inspection (chemical dermatitis, fistula, prolapsing haemorrhoids, rectal prolapse)
  • Perianal sensation (absence of anal wink reflex suggests nerve damage)
  • DRE (mass, assess resting anal tone and strength of squeeze, rectocoele, rectal prolapse, rectal mass, stricture, fistula)
  • Anoscopy or proctoscopy - look for proctitis/cancer

Investigations

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  • Stool studies in patients with diarrhoea
  • Endoscopy
    • Flex sig in patients <40yo with no increased risk of CRC
    • Colonoscopy otherwise
  • Endorectal US (if fail to respond to initial management)
    • Looking for sphincter defects
  • Defecography (defecating proctogram, or defecating MRI proctogram)
    • Looking for rectocoele or other pelvic floor defects
    • Partial evacuation of contents
    • Order if there are features of obstructed defecation
  • Anorectal manometry (if fail to respond to initial management)
    • Looking for sphincter defects
    • Both with and without anal squeeze
  • Balloon expulsion test
  • Electromyography
  • Pudendal nerve terminal motor latency
    • Controversial

Initial management

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Supportive care

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    • Wait 9-12 months after childbirth to investigate
    • Avoid food or activities known to worsen symptoms
      • Avoid incompletely digested sugars (fructose, lactose) and caffeine
    • Keep a food or symptom diary
    • Improve perianal skin hygiene
      • Keep clean and dry, without excessive wiping
      • Can use wet wipes
      • Barrier cream eg zinc oxide to perianal skin
      • Incontinence pads

Medical therapy - aimed at reducing stool frequency or improving stool consistency

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    • Bulking agents, esp in patients with low-volume, loose stools
      • Fibre - psillium husk
    • Anti-diarrhoeal agents - can trial loperamide
      • Be aware this can exacerbate things in patients with decreased rectal compliance (radiation proctitis, rectal stricture)
      • If no response to loperamide, bismuth subsalicylate or cholestyramine may provide benefit, especially in patients post-cholecystectomy or post-ileal resection
    • If faecal impaction, should be disimpacted
    • Evacuation of rectum with suppositories or enemas
      • Esp useful for patients with neurogenic bowel dysfunction - reduces rectal load

Subsequent management

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  • Additional evaluation with some combination of anorectal manometry and USS and defecography
  • Biofeedback therapy - refer to pelvic floor physiotherapist
    • Particularly useful in patients with intact anal sphincters and urge incontinence or decreased rectal sensation; not useful with isolated internal anal sphincter injury; not useful with neuro-psychiatric conditions; not useful with impaired distension
    • Rectal sensory retraining, sphincter exercises, learning to co-ordinate voluntary external sphincter contraction with the onset of rectal distension
    • Non-invasive
    • Time-consuming, but 64-89% see an improvement, especially if there is some degree of preserved voluntary sphincter contraction
    • Low-risk - worth a try

Surgical options:

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  • Reserved for patients in whom conservative management has failed
    • Not for those with overflow incontinence
  • Injectable bulking agents (PTQ)
    • Enhanced mechanical barrier to faecal loss
    • Injected into submucosa, just above dentate line, four areas evenly spaced around anal canal
    • Evidence supports slight benefit but limited role now
  • Sacral nerve stimulation
    • Stimulate S3 nerve root by delivering mild electrical pulses
    • Tined lead is placed next to root under fluoro
    • Mechanism of action not entirely clear, but seems to reduce reported episodes of incontinence and decreased urgency. Possibly enhances the ability of rectum to sense distension.
    • Most patients see an improvement, and about half of patients achieve full continence
  • Overlapping anterior sphincteroplasty
    • Best use is probably for young patients who don't want to have an SNS for life
    • Appropriate for patients with a localised 90 to 180 degree full-thickness defect
    • Should not be done for at least 3-6 months after obstetric injury
    • Function is often initially good but deteriorates with time
    • Direct repair of anal sphincter - usually repair both sphincters as one muscle
    • Technique
      • Perform under GA with bowel prep. Consider diversion for difficult cases.
      • Hemicircumferential incision around anus
      • Dissect out into ischiorectal fat to expose the anus
        • Mobilise the anus from the vagina if needed
      • Split the muscle scar down its length and develop the plane between the anal mucosa and the muscle on either side
      • Reapproximate sphincter edges with 2-0 PDS horizontal mattress suture - like repairing a tendon. Aim for overlap of about 2cm.
  • Repair of pelvic floor injury
    • Indications
      • Rectal prolapse
      • Other pelvic floor injury
  • Stoma creation
    • Indications: failure of medical therapy and other invasive therapies, patient preference
    • Mostly sigmoid colostomy, although in slow transit constipation, an ileostomy can be necessary