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Anorectal Malformations with Dr. Andrea Bischoff

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Topic overview

Expert guidance on evaluating newborns with suspected anorectal malformations, emphasizing proper perineal examination to distinguish rectal perineal fistulas from normal anatomy. Outlines critical associated anomalies to screen within 24 hours including cardiac, esophageal, spinal, and renal defects.

Key takeaways

  • Use a #12 Hegar dilator to assess normal newborn anal caliber; perineal fistulas have small caliber and incomplete sphincter coverage.
  • 50% of ARM patients have urological defects, 30% cardiac anomalies, 25% tethered cord—systematic workup is essential in first 24 hours.
  • Rectal perineal fistulas show horseshoe-shaped sphincter (posterior/lateral present, anterior absent) on visual inspection of perineum.
  • Wait 24 hours before re-examining if fistula not initially visible—meconium passage through tiny opening requires time and pressure.
  • Sacral ratio on lateral X-ray correlates with future bowel control prognosis; hemisacrum suggests presacral mass risk.

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