| Literature DB >> 22900202 |
Sanober Nusrat1, Elsie Gulick, David Levinthal, Klaus Bielefeldt.
Abstract
Constipation and fecal incontinence are common in patients with neuromuscular diseases. Despite their high prevalence and potential impact on overall quality of life, few studies have addressed anorectal dysfunction in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The goal of this paper is to define the prevalence, pathophysiology, impact, and potential treatment of constipation and incontinence in MS patients. Methods. The PubMed database was searched for English language publications between January 1973 and December 2011. Articles were reviewed to assess the definition of the study population, duration, type and severity of MS, sex distribution, prevalence, impact, results of physiologic testing, and treatments. Results. The reported prevalence of constipation and fecal incontinence ranged around 40%. Anorectal dysfunction significantly affected patients with nearly 1 in 6 patients limiting social activities or even quitting work due to symptoms. Caregivers listed toileting as a common and significant burden. The only randomized controlled trial showed a marginal improvement of constipation with abdominal massage. All other reports lacked control interventions and only demonstrated improvement in individuals with milder symptoms. Conclusion. Anorectal dysfunction is a common manifestation in MS that significantly affects quality of life. Therapies are at best moderately effective and often cumbersome, highlighting the need for simple and more helpful interventions.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22900202 PMCID: PMC3414061 DOI: 10.5402/2012/376023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Neurol ISSN: 2090-5505
Figure 1Strategy and results of the PubMed search.
Figure 2The scatter plots show the study populations and prevalence of (a) constipation, (b) fecal incontinence, and (c) coexisting constipation and fecal incontinence in MS patients.
Mechanisms of anorectal dysfunction.
| Assessment tool | Symptom | Sample size | MS severity | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anorectal manometry | Con | 21 | EDDS: 5.3 | Decreased rectoanal inhibitory reflex | [ |
| Con or FI | 39 | EDSS: 5 | No difference based on symptom patterns | [ | |
| DSS ≤5: 5 | |||||
| Con | 13 | DSS ≥5: 8 | Weak external sphincter: 62%; impaired straining: 82% |
[ | |
| Con | 30 | EDSS: 6 | Lower squeeze pressure, impaired valsalva pressures | [ | |
| Con and FI | 11 | Lower sphincter pressures in women | [ | ||
| Con and FI | 23 | Wheelchair: 9 | Abnormal squeeze pressure in a subset | [ | |
| Con and FI | 16 | Impaired amplitude and duration of squeeze pressure | [ | ||
| Con and FI | 52 | EDSS: 4.13 | Decreased squeeze pressures | [ | |
| FI | 6 | Markedly reduced squeeze pressure | [ | ||
| FI | 12 | Lower squeeze pressure in women only after childbirth | [ | ||
| Con | 9 | EDSS: 9.6 | Decreased squeeze pressure | [ | |
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| Recto-anal sensitivity | Con and FI | 39 | EDSS: 5 | No differences in rectal or anal sensory thresholds | [ |
| Con and FI | 11 | Normal rectal sensory thresholds | [ | ||
| FI | 5 | Abnormal sensory threshold to distension in 3/5 patients | [ | ||
| Con | 9 | EDSS: 9.6 | Normal rectal and anal sensory thresholds | [ | |
| FI | 6 | Normal rectal sensory thresholds | [ | ||
| Con and FI | 52 | EDSS: 4.13 | Normal rectal sensory thresholds | [ | |
| Con and FI | 30 | EDSS: 6 | Abnormal sensory threshold to distension in 15 patients | [ | |
Con: constipation; FI: fecal incontinence; EDSS: expanded disability status scale.
Treatment of anorectal dysfunction in multiple sclerosis.
| Treatment | Sample size | Duration | Design | Results | Response rate | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biofeedback | 39 | 3 months | Prospective series | Improvement of constipation and incontinence scores | 46% | [ |
| 13 | 4 months | Prospective series | Patient rating of biofeedback success positive: | 38% | [ | |
| 18 | 2–6 months | Prospective series | Patient reported symptom improvement: | 44% | [ | |
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| Abdominal massage | 30 | 8 weeks | RTC | Increase in defecation frequency for week 4 only; improved composite constipation scores weeks 4 and 8 | [ | |
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| Transanal irrigation | 25 | n/a | Retrospective series | Patient reported improvement: | 40% | [ |
| 10 | n/a | Retrospective series | Patient reported improvement: | 50% | [ | |