Literature DB >> 21383567

Anatomic characteristics of anal fistula on three-dimensional anorectal ultrasonography.

Sthela M Murad-Regadas1, Francisco Sergio Pinheiro Regadas, Lusmar Veras Rodrigues, Graziela Olivia da S Fernandes, Guilherme Buchen, Viviane T Kenmoti, Gabriel Dos Santos Dias Soares, Erico de Carvalho Holanda.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Surgery for anal fistula is often associated with continence disorders due to the transection of sphincter muscles. Extensive knowledge of anal canal anatomy and anal fistula can help prevent this outcome.
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to correlate the anatomical conformation of the anal canal, the fistula track, and the internal opening according to sex and hemicircumference (anterior vs posterior) by use of 3-dimensional ultrasonography.
METHODS: One hundred sixty-five patients with fistula were evaluated with 3-dimensional ultrasound and grouped according to sex, fistula type, internal opening, and track position. Fistulas were transsphincteric in 128 subjects and intersphincteric in 37 subjects. The study measured the external and internal anal sphincter, the puborectalis, the distance from the internal opening to the distal edge of the external and internal sphincter, the length of the internal and external sphincter compromised by the track, and the percentage of compromised muscle.
RESULTS: The anal canal muscles were longer in males. The distance from the internal opening to the internal sphincter was greater for the posterior hemicircumference. The point where the fistulous track crossed the anterior external sphincter was similar for the 2 sexes, but the percentage of compromised muscle was greater in females. The point where the fistulous track crossed the internal sphincter was similar for the 2 sexes, but the percentage of compromised internal sphincter was greater in males for the posterior hemicircumference. The study was limited by the absence of testing for interobserver and intraobserver agreement.
CONCLUSION: The anal canal muscles are longer in males and the pectinate line is asymmetrical. In females, the percentage of compromised external sphincter was greater in the anterior hemicircumference because of the shorter external sphincter, whereas in males the percentage of compromised internal sphincter was greater in the posterior hemicircumference.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21383567     DOI: 10.1007/DCR.0b013e3182060c84

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dis Colon Rectum        ISSN: 0012-3706            Impact factor:   4.585


  3 in total

1.  Role of tridimensional endoanal ultrasound (3D-EAUS) in the preoperative assessment of perianal sepsis.

Authors:  Antonio Brillantino; Francesca Iacobellis; Giandomenico Di Sarno; Francesco D'Aniello; Domenico Izzo; Fiorella Paladino; Maurizio De Palma; Maurizio Castriconi; Roberto Grassi; Natale Di Martino; Adolfo Renzi
Journal:  Int J Colorectal Dis       Date:  2015-03-03       Impact factor: 2.571

2.  Preoperative assessment of simple and complex anorectal fistulas: Tridimensional endoanal ultrasound? Magnetic resonance? Both?

Authors:  Antonio Brillantino; Francesca Iacobellis; Alfonso Reginelli; Luigi Monaco; Biagio Sodano; Giuseppe Tufano; Antonio Tufano; Mauro Maglio; Maurizio De Palma; Natale Di Martino; Adolfo Renzi; Roberto Grassi
Journal:  Radiol Med       Date:  2019-01-03       Impact factor: 3.469

3.  Quantifying the extent of fistulotomy. How much sphincter can we safely divide? A three-dimensional endosonographic study.

Authors:  Marina Garcés-Albir; Stephanie Anne García-Botello; Pedro Esclapez-Valero; Angel Sanahuja-Santafé; Juan Raga-Vázquez; Alejandro Espi-Macías; Joaquín Ortega-Serrano
Journal:  Int J Colorectal Dis       Date:  2012-03-16       Impact factor: 2.571

  3 in total

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