| Literature DB >> 33204136 |
Pankaj Garg1, Sohail Singh Sodhi2, Navdeep Garg3.
Abstract
Anal fistulae can be a very difficult disease to manage. The management of complex fistulae is even more challenging. The risk to the fecal continence mechanism due to damage to the anal sphincters and refractoriness to the treatment (high recurrence rate) pose the two biggest challenges in the management of this disease. Apart from these, there are several other challenges in the treatment of complex fistulae. The intriguing and uphill task is that satisfactory solutions to most of these challenges are still not known, and there is hardly any consensus on whatever treatment solutions are available. To summarize, there is no gold-standard treatment available for treating complex anal fistulae, and the search for a satisfactory treatment option is still on. In this review, the endeavor has been to discuss and highlight recent path-breaking updates in the management of complex anal fistulae.Entities:
Keywords: anal fistula; classification; fistulotomy; incontinence; recurrence; sphincter
Year: 2020 PMID: 33204136 PMCID: PMC7667587 DOI: 10.2147/CEG.S198796
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Gastroenterol ISSN: 1178-7023
Overview of Challenges in Managing Complex anal Fistulae and their Solutions
| Challenges in Managing Complex Anal Fistulae | Solutions (Lettering as in Text) | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | High fistulae (including supralevator, suprasphincteric, and extrasphincteric fistulae) | A — use of appropriate imaging modalities |
| 2 | Multiple tracts | A — use of appropriate imaging modalities |
| 3 | Acute anorectal abscess | A — use of appropriate imaging modalities |
| 4 | Internal opening not found | C — adequate management of intersphincteric tract/sepsis |
| 5 | High recurrence rate | A — use of appropriate imaging modalities |
| 6 | Associated diseases (tuberculosis) | G — proper diagnosis of associated diseases (tuberculosis) |
Figure 1A high transsphincteric fistula.
Figure 2A high transsphincteric fistula with supralevator extension.
Figure 3A suprasphincteric fistula.
Figure 4An extrasphincteric fistula.
Figure 5A 36-year-old male patient underwent surgery for a high intersphincteric fistula. Yellow arrows show the fistula tract/abscess. Left panel: preoperative MRI scans showing a high intersphincteric fistula. Middle panel: after 3 months of the first surgery, the fistula looked clinically healed with closed external opening (upper). However, the MRI scan revealed a large intersphincteric abscess (lower). The patient was operated on again. Right panel: MRI scan after 4 months of the second surgery shows complete radiological healing. The patient is doing well 18 months after the second surgery.
Anal Fistula Classification
| Parks | St James’s University Hospital | Garg | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grade I | Intersphincteric | Intersphincteric — linear | Low — single tract (intersphincteric or transsphincteric) |
| Grade II | Transsphincteric | Intersphincteric — multiple tracts or associated abscess | Low — multiple tracts or associated abscess or horseshoe tract (intersphincteric or transsphincteric) |
| Grade III | Suprasphincteric | Transsphincteric — linear | High — single tract (intersphincteric or transsphincteric) or anterior fistula in a female or associated comorbidities# |
| Grade IV | Extrasphincteric | Transsphincteric — multiple tracts or associated abscess | High — multiple tracts, associated abscess, or horseshoe tract (transsphincteric) |
| Grade V | Supralevator or translevator/extrasphincteric | Suprasphincteric, supralevator, or extrasphincteric |
Notes: Low fistula involves less than a third 1/3 of the external sphincter; high fistula involves greater than a third of the external sphincter. #Comorbidities —associated Crohn’s disease, sphincter injury, or postradiation exposure.