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Dr. CCHMC Pediatric Surgery

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Imperforate Anus Rapid Fire: Update Course 2015

Video Published 2019-01-11 Updated 2026-06-10

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Topic Overview

Expert panel debates management strategies for newborn female with vestibular fistula, focusing on timing of repair versus colostomy versus dilation approach. Discussion emphasizes technical challenges of neonatal repair, risk of inflammation from prolonged dilation, and importance of sphincter identification in surgical planning.

Key Takeaways

  • Vestibular fistulas in newborn females can be managed with dilations (up to 7-8 Hegar) rather than immediate repair to avoid neonatal dissection challenges.
  • Excessive dilation (>8 Hegar) causes scarring and inflammation, making delayed repair more difficult; limit dilation and use stool softeners.
  • Primary anoplasty in newborns requires precise sphincter identification; repair at 8-9 kg (3-6 months) may be technically easier than at 2 kg.
  • Absent vagina with vestibular fistula requires preoperative recognition; definitive repair may need vaginal reconstruction with bowel graft.
  • Colostomy vs. primary repair depends on surgeon comfort and resources; 'medical colostomy' (NPO + TPN postop) may reduce infection risk but lacks data support.

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