| Literature DB >> 27176040 |
Gang Yang1, Yingli Wang2, Xiaoping Jiang3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although anorectal malformations (ARMs) are frequently encountered, rare variants difficult to classify have been reported.Entities:
Keywords: Anorectal malformation; Rectopenile fistula; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27176040 PMCID: PMC4866328 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-016-0604-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Fig. 1a A catheter was inserted into the orifice of the fistula. b Fistulography showed the fistula and the end of the rectum
Fig. 2a Urethrography showed the urethra and the bladder. A small amount of contrast appeared in the rectum. The location of fistula entering the urethra was displayed (arrow). b Limited PSARP was performed. The rectum had been divided (upper arrow) and a catheter was inserted to the fistula (lower arrow)
Fig. 3PRISMA flow chart of literature search
Summary of included cases
| Authors | Year | Age of Diagnosis | Type of Fistula | Level of rectum (distance to skin) | Operation | Management of fistula | Associated anomalies | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ohno et al. | 2008 | 6 months | parallel to the urethra from the rectal pouch to the spongy urethra | Below the ischium (1 cm) | Transverse colostomy, ASARP, colostomy clousure | Severed from the rectum and ligated | Right aortic arch | Vesicoureteral reflux, constipation |
| Kumar et al. | 2005 | 18 months | between the anal canal and the skin in the peno-scrotal junction, with a small portion of common channel in the penile urethra | Anoplasty, colostomy + fistula excision | removed | |||
| Shah et al. | 2003 | 9 months | From the rectum to the ventral aspect of the penis, no communication with urethra | low | Transverse colostomy, PSARP, colostomy closure | Ligated, distal part was kept undisturbed | Solitary kidney | |
| Currarino et al. | 1994 | 9 months | extending from rectum to cutaneous orifice near the penoscrotal junction, with communication with the bulbar urethra | Below the ischial line | Perineal anoplasty, descending colostomy, fistula excision | Bifid scrotum, mild sacral anomalies | Urinary tract infection | |
| 2 days | A long rectocutaneous fistula open on the undersurface of the penis, communicating with the bulbar urethra | Below the ischial line | Colostomy, sacroperineal rectal pull-through with ligation of rectal fistula, colostomy closure, excision of urethrocutaneous fistula | Bifid scrotum | ||||
| Takamatsu et al. | 1993 | 11 months | Fistula between the anorectum and anterior urethra | below the I line | Sigmoid colostomy, perineal anoplasty and revision of the fistula | Bifida scrotum, hypospadias, right undescended testicle, right hydronephrosis, congenital heart disease | ||
| Unknown | Fistula between the anorectum and anterior urethra | Below the I line | Sigmoid colostomy, revision of fistula and perineal anoplasty | |||||
| Asano et al. | 1983 | 3 months | Fistula from rectum and open in the ventral surface of the penis, communication with urethra | Under the skin | Cutback procedure, excision of the fistula |
ASARP: anterior sagittal anorectoplasty; PSARP: posterior sagittal anorectoplasty
Fig. 4Diagrams for the different type of malformations (a anopenile urethral fistula; b fistula extending in the corpus spongiosum and opening in the ventral aspect of the penis; c Fistula with a communication or a short common channel with the urethra)