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Anal Diseases

Anal Diseases. Levator ani muscle. Deep external sphincter and Puborectalis muscle. Conjoined longitudinal muscle. Subcutaneous external sphincter. Anatomy. Anorectal ring. Arterial supply of the rectum. Superior rectal artery Middle rectal artery Inferior rectal artery.

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Anal Diseases

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  1. Anal Diseases

  2. Levator ani muscle Deep external sphincter and Puborectalis muscle Conjoined longitudinal muscle Subcutaneous external sphincter Anatomy Anorectal ring

  3. Arterial supply of the rectum • Superior rectal artery • Middle rectal artery • Inferior rectal artery

  4. Venous drainage of the rectum • Internal hemorrhoidal plexus • External hemorrhoidal plexus

  5. Sensory Components Neuro pathways • Sympathetic + parasympathetic pathways to internal sphincter (hypogastric) • Somatic to external sphincter (pudendal)

  6. Sphincter factors Basal tone • Pressure zone • anal canal 25–120 mmHg • rectum 5 – 20 mmHg • Continuous tone of int. and ext. sphincter increases with increased abdominal pressure

  7. Mechanism of Anal Continence Structural considerations • Anorectal angle between rectum and anal canal • Flap valve angle of the anterior rectal mucosa caused by puborectalis causes occlusion • Internal sphincter in continuous tonic state with external sphincter engaged during Vasalva

  8. Anal Fissure • Ulcer in the lower portion of the anal canal • Acute / chronic primary / secondary • Sx: anal pain, during and after BM’s

  9. Anal Fissure Triade of anal fissure • anal papilla hypertrophy • fissure in ano • sentinel pile

  10. Acute Fissure Treatment • inspection, usually increased anal tone can be appreciated on rectal exam if tolerated • cleansing measures typically resolve in 6 weeks without surgical intervention

  11. Chronic Fissure • sentinel tag, ulcer,hypertrophied anal papilla • Form because of swelling, edema, and low grade inflammation may go on to fibrosis • Extends from the dentate line to the anal verge

  12. Chronic Fissure Teatment • nitroglycerin ointment 0.2% - 0.4% BID • Topical diltiazem (50% resolution at 6 weeks) • Botulinum toxin A injection – 42% recurrence at 42 months – side effects • Surgery: lateral internal sphincterotomy

  13. Lateral internal sphincterotomy

  14. Secondary anal fissure • Crohn’s disease • Non-midline or abnormal appearing fissure should undergo margin biopsy • Avoid surgery in neutropenic patients – treat with perineal hygine and pain relief

  15. Anorectal Abscess

  16. Anorectal Abscess • Infection in one of the anal glands • May be asymptomatic or cause severe throbbing pain that resembles a fissure • Abscess should be drained when diagnosed

  17. Anorectal Abscess • Sx: severe pain (aggravated by walking, straining) • Swollen mass may be appreciated

  18. Anorectal Abscess Treatment • drainage, avoid packing, no abscess typically • Crohn’s disease oral metronidazole or ciprofloxacin seems to have a mitigating effect

  19. Fistula • Chronic form of perianal abscess • Evaluation with anoscopy, endoanal ultrasound • Classification

  20. Fistula intersphincteric transsphincteric suprasphincteric extraspincteric

  21. Goodsall’s rule

  22. Fistula Treatment • Unroofing the fistula, eliminating the internal opening, and establishing adequate drainage • Older patients use loosely tied setons to allow for adequate drainage

  23. Anal fistulotomy

  24. Thread-drawing

  25. Hemorrhoids

  26. Hemorrhoids • Varices of hemorrhoidal plexus • A-V communication in anal mucosa • Vascular cushions – thick submucosa with blood vessels, smooth muscle, elastic and connective tissue

  27. Hemorrhoid Classification • External skin tags • External hemorrhoids (below the dentate line) • Internal hemorrhoids

  28. Internal hemorrhoids Treatment • Bulking agents for first and second degree hemorrhoids • Sclerotherapy • Infrared Photocoagulation • Banding 2 – 3 ligations at 4 to 6 week • Hemorrhoidectomy • Stapled Circular Hemorrhoidectomy for prolapsed hemorrhoids

  29. Procedure for prolapsed hemorrhoids

  30. Circumcise for hemorrhoids

  31. Neoplasms of the Anal Canal • Squamous cell carcinoma • Basaloid Carcinoma • Mucoepidermoid Carcinomas • Adenocarcinomas

  32. Thank you

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