Forty-four patients seen between 1975 and 1985 with anorectal strictures complicating Crohn's disease have been reviewed to determine the natural history and outcome of surgical treatment. Proctitis was present in 98 per cent, and 93 per cent of patients had sever perianal disease. The site of strictures was rectal in 22, anal in 15 and anorectal in 11 (4 patients had a stricture at 2 sites). Initial treatment was by rectal excision alone in 6, dilatation in 33, and 5 needed no treatment at all. Single dilatation was effective in 15, 8 required two dilatations and in 10 repeated dilatation was necessary. Proctocolectomy was eventually required in 19 patients, 2 have a loop ileostomy and 1 has an ileostomy with a rectal stump in situ. Only 21 remain asymptomatic while 3 continue to need dilatation. Perineal wound healing was delayed in 9 of 19 patients having a proctocolectomy and in 3 the perineal wound has never healed.
Two treatment policies for rectal prolapse were prospectively assessed between April 1986 and January 1989. Sixteen patients had a Marlex mesh posterior rectopexy alone and 13 underwent a sigmoidectomy combined with a sutured posterior rectopexy. Preoperative and post-operative assessment included manometry, a saline infusion test and video-proctography. Hospital stay, control of prolapse and complications were comparable in both groups. Restoration of continence occurred in nine of the 12 incontinent patients after Marlex rectopexy, compared with six of nine after sutured rectopexy and sigmoidectomy. Constipation persisted in three patients who were constipated before operation and in four of 13 who had previously normal bowel habits became constipated after Marlex rectopexy; constipation persisted in one of five previously constipated patients while none with previously normal bowel habits became constipated after sutured rectopexy and sigmoidectomy. Sigmoidectomy combined with sutured rectopexy was safe and as efficient as Marlex rectopexy in prolapse control and improvement of continence; significantly fewer patients were constipated (one of 13) after sigmoidectomy than following rectopexy alone (seven of 16). A randomized trial now seems justified.
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