The long-term post-surgical outcome of intermediate anorectal malformation in our department
Topic overview
This retrospective study evaluates long-term bowel function outcomes in 11 patients with intermediate anorectal malformations treated with a continence-preserving pull-through procedure, showing favorable results with 9% incontinence and 45% constipation rates after median 14.4-year follow-up. The study compares these outcomes with historical literature and emphasizes the importance of preserving continence mechanisms during surgical repair.
Key takeaways
- Pull-through procedures preserving continence mechanisms achieved 91% continence rate at 14+ years follow-up in intermediate ARM patients.
- Constipation remains common (45%) despite good surgical outcomes, requiring long-term bowel management strategies.
- Preservation of rectal angulation and rectoanal inhibitory reflex correlates with favorable continence outcomes post-anorectoplasty.
- Fistula recurrence occurred in 18% of cases, necessitating surgical revision and extended surveillance protocols.
- Outcome variability across anorectoplasty techniques highlights need for standardized long-term assessment tools in ARM surgery.
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How to cite: GlobalCastMD. The long-term post-surgical outcome of intermediate anorectal malformation in our department. GlobalCastMD Medical Library. 2024-09-23. https://dev.library.globalcastmd.com/article/9195?via_home=1
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