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Regaining bowel control – practical tips Jacquie Peck Julie Storrie Regaining Bowel Control Jacquie Peck Colorectal and Anal Cancer Clinical Nurse Specialist UCLH Hepatic Flexure – 2% Transverse Colon – 5.5% Splenic flexure – 3% Ascending Colon – 5% Caecum – 12% Rectum – 38% Descending Colon – 4% Recto-Sigmoid junction – 7% Sigmoid Colon – 21 % The large bowel (colon and rectum) Surgical Resection Anterior resection Role of the Bowel Small Bowel o It is responsible for absorbing most of the nutrients found within food. o The stomach / duodenum breaks food down into liquid form. o Nutrients come into contact with the blood vessels which surround the small intestine. o o This blood then leaves the small intestine, carrying away nutrients, water electrolytes, vitamins, minerals, fats and medications to the entire body. It takes three to six hours for a meal to pass from one end of the small intestine to the other Role of the Bowel Large Bowel o to transport waste out of the body and to absorb water from the waste before it leaves. The large bowel connects with the small bowel to the north and freedom (open air) to the south. o When waste first reaches the large bowel, it dumps into it like sludge from a chute. The sludge solidifies as it travels through the large bowel until it reaches the rectum. Role of the bowel o o o o o Normal defecation Rectal distension stimulates stretch receptors Automatic contraction of the rectal muscle layer Simultaneous relaxation of the internal sphincters Perception of descending faeces Conscious voluntary control of external sphincters to contract or relax as necessary Effects of Surgery 40 % of patients post surgery will have return to normal bowel function 60% will experience post-surgery bowel dysfunction Post-surgical bowel dysfunction includes urgency, diarrhoea and constipation Diarrhoea Definition – state in which a normal person experiences a change in normal bowel habit characterised by frequent passage of loose, fluid, unformed stools. Other definitions relate to the weight, volume and frequency of stool. Some define it as it being 3 or more motions per day Bristol Stool Chart Type 1–2 indicate constipation Type 3–4 are ideal stools as they are easier to pass, and Type 5–7 may indicate diarrhoea and urgency. Causes of Diarrhoea Resection of bowel Intestinal failure Crohns / Ulcerative colitis Irritable bowel syndrome Bile acid malabsorption Radiation enteritis Chronic pancreatitis Diabetes Hypothyroidism Alcohol Medications including chemotherapy, laxatives, antibiotics, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, metformin Infection Symptoms Increased frequency of stool Loose or liquid stools Increased frequency of bowel sounds Abdominal pain Cramping Urgency Change in colour of stool Management of Diarrhoea – o Regular meals o Drink a minimum of 8 cups of fluids per day o Restrict tea / coffee to 3 cups per day o Reduce intake of alcohol / fizzy drinks o Avoid sorbitol found in artificial sweeteners, sugarfree chewing gum, diabetic and slimming products o Diet o It may be helpful to limit intake of high-fibre foods such as wholemeal or highfibre flour breads, cereals high in bran and whole grains such as brown rice o Reduce intake of ‘resistant starch’ (resists digestion in small intestine) often found in processed or pre-cooked foods o If suffering from wind or bloating eating oats / linseeds may help Management of Diarrhoea Medical Management o Loperamide – titrate dose until soft formed stool (Bristol stool scale type 4) o Take loperamide 30 – 60 minutes prior to meals o Codiene phosphate – 30 – 60mg 4 times per day Antispasmodics o Buscopan (hyoscine butylbromide) – 20mg 4 times per day o Colpermin (peppermint oil) 1 – 2 tablets up to 3 times per day o Mebeverine 135 – 150mg 3 times per day 20 minutes before meals Management of Diarrhoea Lifestyle – o 30 minutes of moderate activity 5 times per week If medical management is not helping referral to functional bowel team should occur. Other treatments o Hypnotherapy o Cognitive behavioural therapy o Biofeedback Constipation Definition – difficulty in passing stools or incomplete or infrequent passage of hard stools (Bristol stool scale type 1 – 2) Bristol Stool Scale Type 1–2 indicate constipation Type 3–4 are ideal stools as they are easier to pass, and Type 5–7 may indicate diarrhoea and urgency. Causes Bowel surgery Diet Age Depression Diverticular disease Multiple sclerosis Rectocele Stroke Dementia Parkinsons disease Diabetes Irritable bowel syndrome Hypo and hyperthyroidism Medication Chronic kidney disease Inactivity Symptoms Stomach ache and cramps Feeling bloated Feeling nauseous Loss of appetite Lack of energy Being irritable, angry or unhappy Foul-smelling wind and stools Management of Constipation Diet – o Increase fibre to 25g per day. o High fibre foods include wholemeal or high-fibre flour breads, cereals high in bran and whole grains such as brown rice o Increase fluid to minimum 8 cups per day o Add bran to diet Management of Constipation Types of Laxatives o Bulking Agents – absorb liquids in the intestines and swell to form a soft bulky stool e.g Fybogel o Stool Softeners – help liquids mix into the stool and prevent dry hard stool e.g. Milpar / docusate sodium o Lubricants – coat the bowel and stool mass with a waterproof film so stools remain soft e.g liquid paraffin laxatives – encourage bowel movements by acting on the intestinal wall e.g. senna, codanthramer o Osmotic agents – draw water into the bowel from surrounding body tissues, providing a soft stool e.g. Lactulose, Movicol o Stimulant Management of Constipation Large Bowel Laxative and small bowel laxative Large bowel laxative and softener Large bowel laxative Step 2 Step 1 Rectal Measures PRN Step 3 Management of Constipation Lifestyle – o 30 minutes of moderate activity 5 times per week o Toileting advice o Address any relevant psychosocial issues o If medical management is not helping referral to functional bowel team should occur. Other treatments o Hypnotherapy o Cognitive Behavioural therapy o Biofeedback Questions Bowel Retraining What patients say when they come to clinic… • “When I feel pressure in the bowel, I need to get to the toilet within 2 minutes” • “I just can’t go to the toilet” • “I can’t control them” • “Chaos. It can go from going to the toilet all the time to not going at all.” • “Soiling overnight” • “Flatulence with leakage” Predominant symptoms following anterior resection • • • • • • Urgency Frequency during the day and night (up to 30x a day) Rectal hypersensitivity Incomplete evacuation: Stool consistency = semi-formed to loose stools Incontinence – can be urge or passive (post anterior resection 50% have faecal incontinence at 3 months) Bowel retraining can address these symptoms… With bowel retraining…. • Think: sink, plug, contents • “Chunk” treatment • 1st appointment – assessment and brace – for incomplete evacuation • 2nd appointment – sphincter exercises, loperamide advice etc. Assessment of symptoms and explanation •Predominant symptom •Frequency (day and night) •Stool consistency •Blood/mucus •Need to digitate •Incomplete evacuation •Strain •Pain •Bloating •Urgency •Incontinence / post-defaecatory staining •Continent of flatus •Bowel medications •Diet •Skin problems around back passage •Other information • Use diagrams What is “The Brace” ? ...to help improve incomplete evacuation BIOFEEDBACK PROGRAMME THE BRACE TECHNIQUE 1. CHECK YOUR SITTING POSITION ON THE TOILET (SLOUCH ) Lean forward with your forearms resting on your thighs. Relax. Lower your shoulders. Try to “let go” with all of your muscles. Breathe slowly and gently. 2. NOW TRY TO OPEN YOUR BOWELS Remember NOT to hold your breath ie: do not take a big breath i n first. a) Slowly brace outwards (widen your waist). When fully braced push/propel from your waist back and downwards into your back passage. DO NOT STRAIN! b) Relax for a second. c) Brace outwards and push downwards agai n. This should be repeated. You should be using your brace as a pump. Remember, this will take time and practice. Biofeedback Therapist: Telephone Number: 020 3447 7982 Tuesdays, Thursdays & Fridays Unit Reception Number: 020 3447 9130 Reviewed by Julie Storrie 2011 Explosive stools ? Use the Champagne Bottle Technique For incontinence: • • • • • • • • • • • • • BIOFEEDBACK PROGRAMME ANAL SPHINCTER MUSCLE EXERCISES WHAT ARE THE ANAL SPHINCTER MUSCLES? The anal sphincter muscles are two rings of muscles which wrap around the anus/back passage. The inner ring is the internal anal sphincter muscle. It should be closed at all times, except when you are trying to open your bowels. You cannot control this muscle. The outer ring is the external anal sphincter muscle. You can control this muscle and tighten it up to close it more firmly if you need to. If these muscles become weak or damaged you may be incontinent of wind or faeces. However, exercises can help. If the internal anal sphincter muscle is weak or damaged you cannot exercise this to strengthen it. You can exercise the external anal sphincter muscle. Exercise should make this muscle stronger and help to prevent incontinence. LEARNING TO DO THE EXERCISES Sit on a chair and relax. Lower your shoulders and breathe slowly and gently. Imagine you are trying to stop yourself passing wind from your back passage. Try squeezing and lifting your back passage muscle as tightly as you can. You should be able to feel the muscle move. Try and feel your back passage tightening and being pulled up and away from the chair. (Your buttocks, abdomen and legs should not be moving and you should not be holding your breath!) This is an anal sphincter muscle exercise! Now imagine that your back passage is a lift. If you are relaxed your lift is resting on the first floor. Pull your lift: up to second floor up to third floor up to fourth floor You cannot hold that level of squeeze for very long. Relax. Now take your lift just to the second floor. (Like a half squeeze.) You will be able to maintain the level of squeeze for longer. • BIOFEEDBACK PROGRAMME • • • • ANAL SPHINCTER MUSCLE EXERCISES • • • • 1. STRENGTHENING EXERCISE Sit, stand or lie with your knees slightly apart. Squeeze and pull up the back passage/ anal sphincter muscle as tightly as you can. Hold tightened for as long as you can. Relax for 10 seconds. Repeat at least 5 times. 2. ENDURANCE EXERCISE Remember your lift. Relaxed, it is resting on the first floor. Do not pull up to the fourth floor but rather just up to the second floor. Time how long you can hold this for. Relax for 10 seconds. Repeat at least 5 times. • • 3. CO-ORDINATION EXERCISE In quick succession pull up your muscle as tightly as you can, let go, do it again! Count how many times you can do this before you get tired. Try for at least 5 quick pull ups. • Try and do these exercises a few times every day. As the muscle gets stronger you will find that you can squeeze tighter, hold for longer and do more quick pull ups before you get tired. Get into the habit of doing the exercises when you do something else regularly-when you turn a tap on, or when you are in the car, waiting for the traffic lights to change from red to green! You will need to do anal sphincter muscle exercises every day for several months before you notice an improvement. DON’T GIVE UP! • Frequency, urgency and stool consistency • 5-5-5 breathing technique • Diet (caffeine, artificial sweeteners, fruit veg and fibre, nuts) • Loperamide advice: may need syrup – aim for soft/firm stools • Fybogel for some – can help to bulk stools • Coloplast Peristeen anal plugs for passive incontinence One patient case scenario • 64 year old woman • Low anterior resection, temporary ileostomy, chemo–radiotherapy On assessment • • • • Hard to Semi-formed stools 10-15 times a day Incomplete evacuation Urgency daily Urge incontinence of a little stool a few times a week After bowel retraining • • • • • Soft and sometimes loose stools 1-5 times a day Emptying a little more effectively Urgency less frequent and less “intense” Urge incontinence once a week Loperamide syrup occasionally What else ? • Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation • Trans-anal irrigation Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation Trans anal irrigation Peristeen Qufora Thank you