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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
ABSTRACT
Objective: endoanal ultrasonography can detect organic causes
of anal pain without pathology on physical examination. The
aim of this study is to evaluate the importance of endoanal ultrasonography
in the diagnosis and therapeutic management of idiopathic
and functional anal pain.
Material and methods: retrospective study, between 15
March 2005 and 15 June 2008, of all patients with proctalgia
and normal examination or with alterations not responsible for
anal pain at proctologic exam that have undergone an endoanal
ultrasonography.
Results: a total of 90 patients were analyzed, with a mean
age of 50.5 years, 58% were female. Twenty-three patients had
functional anal pain clinic criteria. Endoanal ultrasonography revealed
alterations in 49% of patients. The primary findings were
changes in sphincters in 14 patients, followed by anal sepsis in 12
patients, anal fissure in 10 patients, perirectal lesions in 6 patients
and ulcer of the anal canal in 2 patients. Of the patients with
sphincter defects, 5 patients had criteria of chronic anal pain. In
this group of patients, no differences were found in manometric
and defecographic results between the different ultrasound abnormalities.
Conclusions: the endoanal ultrasonography detected occult
organic lesions to proctologic examination, in half the patients
with anal pain. Ultrasound abnormalities were found in 22% of
patients with functional anal pain. However, there was no correlation
between ultrasound findings and physiological studies, and
therefore could not find etiological or pathogenic factors of functional
anal pain.
Description
Keywords
Anal pain Endoanal ultrasonography Proctalgia fugax Chronic anal pain
Citation
Rev Esp Enferm Dig. 2010 May;102(5):308-13.
Publisher
Aran Ediciones