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Transcript
Anorectal Pain
Andy Ramwell
Consultant General and Colorectal Surgeon
St George’s Hospital and Parkside
Anatomy
Cause
• Anal fissure
• Infection
– Skin – fungal, bacterial, STI
– Perianal abscess/fistula
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Skin problem – dermatitis, psoriasis
Malignancy
Anal ulcer
Haemorrhoids
Pain syndromes
Anal fissure
• Commonest cause of pain
• Sharp pain during defeacation
• Dull ache afterwards
– Can last for hours
• May be able to localise
• Bleeding
• May have abnormal bowel habit
Anal Fissure
• Chronic fissure
– 6/52 +
– Sentinel pile/tag
– Intra-anal fibroepithelial polyp
• Multiple fissure
– Consider other causes
– IBD, TB, HIV
• Post partum
Anal fissure - Treatment
• Conservative
– Soften bowels
– Topical lignocaine
– Oral analgesia
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GTN 0.4% (Rectogesic)
Diltiazem 2% (Anoheal)
Botulinum toxin
Surgery
– Lateral sphincterotomy
– Fissurectomy
– Advancement flaps
• Low pressure fissures
Infection - Skin
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Fungal
Bacterial
Viral/STI
Often with pruritus
Treat with steroid cream +/antibiotic/antifungal
• Skin swab?
• GU clinic?
Dermatology
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Dermatitis
Psoriasis
Lichen sclerosis
Very itchy
Dermatology review
Infection - abscess
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Severe, constant pain
Cannot sit
Usually obvious signs of inflammation
Intersphinteric abscess
Anal fistula
Abscess - treatment
• Antibiotics
– Early stages
– If induration
• Incision and drainage
• Treat fistula
– Lay open
– Seton
– Glue/plug
– LIFT procedure
Malignancy
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Can present with pain
Usually constant
Progressive
Lump
Anal Cancer
Anal Cancer - Introduction
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4% of large bowel malignancies
350-400 new cases per year in Eng/Wales
Increasing incidence
80% are squamous
Anal receptive intercourse  relative risk by 33
times
• More common x30 in HIV+ve
• Anal warts  relative risk by x27♂ and x22♀
Anal cancer - treatment
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Local excision
Chemoradiotherapy
Nodal treatment
Salvage surgery
Extralevator abdominoperineal excision and
reconstruction
Anal Ulcers
• Crohn’s
• Nicorandil
• Malignant
Haemorrhoids
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Not usually painful
Uncomfortable
Irritate/itch
Bleed
Prolapse
Painful haemorrhoids
Thrombosed haemorrhoids
• Perianal haematoma
– Can be incised and squeezed under LA
• True thrombosed haemorrhoids
– Conservative Rx
• May not need other intervention
• Investigate other symptoms eg bleeding
Haemorrhoids - treatment
• Conservative
– Diet
– Stool softener
– Topical treatments
• Outpatients
– Injection sclerotherapy
– Banding
Haemorrhoids – treatment
• Operative
– Haemorrhoidectomy
– Stapled haemorrhoidopexy
– Ligasure
– Haemorrhoidal ligation procedures
• THD
• HALO
Transanal Haemorrhoidal
Dearterialisation
Pain syndromes
• Proctalgia fugax
• Chronic idiopathic anal pain (levator ani
syndrome)
• Coccydynia
Proctalgia Fugax
• Sudden, short lived, severe, self limiting bursts of
anorectal pain
• Only lasts longer than 5 mins in 10%
• Max 30 mins
• Variable pattern, M=F, 30% at night
• <5 times per year in 51%
• Lifetime prevalence 8-18%
• 90% anal pain
• PR is normal
Chronic Idiopathic anal pain
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“Bearing down pain”
Worse sitting
Prevalence 6-7%
Declines after 45yrs
F>M
Major psychological overlay
Frequently have puborectalis tenderness on
PR
Coccydynia
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Severe rectal, perineal and sacrococcygeal pain
Continuous, burning pain
Radiates buttocks/thighs
Mainly female
Worse sitting down
Pain can be reproduced by manipulation of the
coccyx
• Very difficult treatment
History
• When?
– During defeacation – usually a fissure
– With wiping – skin issue
– Constant – thrombosed pile, abscess, malignancy
• Timescale
– Acute, sudden – thrombosed pile, fissure
– Over a few days – abscess
– Over months – malignancy, skin problem
History
• Is there rectal bleeding?
• Alarm symptoms
– Weight loss
– Bowel habit
Examination
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Is there anything to see?
A fissure may be hidden
Is the skin warm and/or swollen?
Is there a lump? What colour is it?
Is the anus moist or dry?
Is a PR possible? Don’t attempt if there is a
fissure
Summary
• Anal fissure is the commonest cause of anal
pain
• No obvious cause needs EUA
• Often conservative measures will work