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Primary treatment of constipation • Explanation of symptoms and education • Ensure adequate fluid intake (1500 mls) • Adequate, but not excessive, fibre intake (suggested 30gm fibre per day). This should be in a mixture of formats rather than just adding cereal fibre to the diet • Increase daily exercise if possible (massage??) Retraining for chronic constipation - 1 • Educate the patient about normal bowel activity • Stop all laxatives • Eat breakfast and take a warm drink • Capitalise on the gastro-colic response by attempting to use the toilet approximately 20-30 minutes after breakfast • Sit on toilet with feet raised on a footstool Retraining for chronic constipation - 2 • Use abdominal muscles to expel stool, but do not hold breath and strain • Review medications and change those likely to cause constipation if possible • Glycerin suppositories may help for 1-2 weeks to get a regular bowel habit established, but always review this after 2 weeks. Biofeedback for constipation • Show patient paradoxical EAS contraction (EMG): learn to relax • Rectal sensation training • Abdominal EMG: pushing correctly? • No evidence that biofeedback better than verbal training in adults or children • May help “sell” the exercises to sceptical patients? Rational use of laxatives • Most become less effective with time • Some cause abdominal discomfort and bloating • Response seems very individual • Very limited evidence base • Rectal vs. oral? • What to try first – Symptoms, past history, what else?? Laxatives: non-impacted • Address diet, fluid, toilet, exercise, habit • Evacuation difficulty – suppository or micro enema • Hard stool – bulk laxative • Symptoms persist – add stimulant • Symptoms persist – try osmotic agent (Emmanuel 2002) Impaction • Exclude organic disease • Non-ambulant: enemas • Ambulant: osmotic eg magnesium sulphate or macrogols (Emmanuel 2002) When to use manual evacuation? • • • • • • Faecal impaction / loading Incomplete defaecation Inability to defaecate Other bowel emptying failed Neurogenic bowel dysfunction Spinal Cord Injury Anal electrical stimulation • Suggested should improve muscle function • Strong enough current @ 35Hz : involuntary muscle contraction • Used especially when voluntary contraction very weak Anal electrical stimulation: RCT • Biofeedback waiting list • Recruited, NO ASSESSMENT OR ADVICE OR EXERCISES • Randomised (blinded) to 35Hz or 1Hz • 8 weeks use at home • Manometry, diary, symptom questionnaire before & after • Patients’ evaluation after Results • • • • • • • 90 patients randomised 43 sham (1Hz), 47 active (35 Hz) 70 completed No differences active & sham detected Median rating +2 (-5 to +5 scale) Median satisfaction 5.5/10 Sensitisation may be more important than strenthening?? • (Norton et al 2006, DCR Feb) Summary • Biofeedback is a tool to help patients learn about bowel function and how to control it • Patient teaching and education may be the most important part • Biofeedback useful with some patients • But you CAN run a good service without fancy equipment