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BACKGROUND
Because obstetric injury to the anal sphincters may be occult, and because the mechanism of injury differs between first and subsequent deliveries, we prospectively assessed the effects of first and second vaginal deliveries on anal physiology and continence.
METHODS
We undertook a
OBJECTIVE
To review last year's literature on combined fecal and urinary incontinence, highlighting the most recent contributions on prevalence, physiopathology, evaluation, and treatment.
RESULTS
Prevalence studies of double incontinence are rare but both conditions are frequently associated with
Patients with obstructed defaecation (OD) perform major defaecatory efforts that lead progressively to pudendal motor neuropathy. Anorectal sensory function in these patients and its possible influence in the pathogenesis of the disease have been little studied. In the present paper we investigated
Anal sphincter injury secondary to obstetric trauma during vaginal delivery occurs in nearly one of every five women. Episiotomy, forceps delivery, and prolonged second stage of labor have all been shown to increase the risk of sphincter disruption. One third of these women will go on to have
Faecal incontinence is common, distressing to the patient and socially incapacitating. The treatment options depend on the severity and aetiology of incontinence. For mild cases of faecal incontinence, medical management and pelvic floor physiotherapy may be adequate. For more severe cases, surgery
BACKGROUND
Pudendal neuropathy causes idiopathic fecal incontinence. We thus designed a new operation for idiopathic fecal incontinence based on the hypothesis that a conversion from innervation by the neuropathic pudendal nerve to that by the normal somatic peripheral nerve innervating a larger
The term 'piriformis syndrome' (PS), introduced by Robinson in 1947, implies a group of signs and symptoms caused by piriformis muscle (PM) disorders. Since PM disorders lead to irritation/compression of the anatomic structures passing under its belly, the main clinical PS signs and symptoms are
Cryoneuroablation, also known as cryoanalgesia or cryoneurolysis, is a specialized technique for providing long-term pain relief in interventional pain management settings. Modern cryoanalgesia traces its roots to Cooper et al who developed in 1961, a device that used liquid nitrogen in a hollow