BACKGROUND: A proportion of patients with chronic anal fissure have persistent symptoms and pathology despite optimum conservative therapies. Lateral anal sphincterotomy, the standard surgical treatment, is associated with functional compromise in a minority of patients. Sphincter-sparing anoplasty has been advocated as an alternative procedure for those with "low pressure" sphincters. The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of simple cutaneous advancement flap anoplasty (SCAFA) when applied to consecutive patients with chronic anal fissure irrespective of anal tone and the patient's gender. METHOD: This was a prospective outcome study of 51 consecutive patients treated with SCAFA over a 6.5-year period. RESULTS: Surgery was well tolerated. There were three (5.9%) early flap dehiscences, all of which were treated with repeat SCAFA, and one of those three patients remained symptomatic at 2 months. All fissures healed in the short term. Three other patients subsequently developed fissures at sites remote from the original pathology. Continence was unaffected by the procedure. CONCLUSIONS: Simple cutaneous advancement flap anoplasty should be considered as a first-line surgical treatment of chronic anal fissure, irrespective of patient gender and anal tone.
BACKGROUND: A proportion of patients with chronic anal fissure have persistent symptoms and pathology despite optimum conservative therapies. Lateral anal sphincterotomy, the standard surgical treatment, is associated with functional compromise in a minority of patients. Sphincter-sparing anoplasty has been advocated as an alternative procedure for those with "low pressure" sphincters. The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of simple cutaneous advancement flap anoplasty (SCAFA) when applied to consecutive patients with chronic anal fissure irrespective of anal tone and the patient's gender. METHOD: This was a prospective outcome study of 51 consecutive patients treated with SCAFA over a 6.5-year period. RESULTS: Surgery was well tolerated. There were three (5.9%) early flap dehiscences, all of which were treated with repeat SCAFA, and one of those three patients remained symptomatic at 2 months. All fissures healed in the short term. Three other patients subsequently developed fissures at sites remote from the original pathology. Continence was unaffected by the procedure. CONCLUSIONS: Simple cutaneous advancement flap anoplasty should be considered as a first-line surgical treatment of chronic anal fissure, irrespective of patient gender and anal tone.
Authors: Carl J Brown; Daniel Dubreuil; Laura Santoro; Maria Liu; Brenda I O'Connor; Robin S McLeod Journal: Dis Colon Rectum Date: 2007-04 Impact factor: 4.585
Authors: Angelita Habr-Gama; Carlos Walter Sobrado; Sergio Eduardo Alonso de Araújo; Sergio Carlos Nahas; Ingrid Birbojm; Caio Sergio Rizkallah Nahas; Desidério Roberto Kiss Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) Date: 2005-03-01 Impact factor: 2.365
Authors: Rosalia Patti; Giovanni Guercio; Valentina Territo; Paolo Aiello; Giuseppe Livio Angelo; Gaetano Di Vita Journal: Updates Surg Date: 2012-04-10