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Fecal incontinence

Fecal incontinence (FI), or in some forms encopresis, is a lack of control over defecation, leading to involuntary loss of bowel contents, both liquid stool elements and mucus, or solid feces. When this loss includes flatus (gas), it is referred to as anal incontinence. FI is a sign or a symptom, not a diagnosis. Incontinence can result from different causes and might occur with either constipation or diarrhea. Continence is maintained by several interrelated factors, including the anal sampling mechanism, and incontinence usually results from a deficiency of multiple mechanisms. The most common causes are thought to be immediate or delayed damage from childbirth, complications from prior anorectal surgery (especially involving the anal sphincters or hemorrhoidal vascular cushions), altered bowel habits (e.g., caused by irritable bowel syndrome, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, food intolerance, or constipation with overflow incontinence).[1] An estimated 2.2% of community-dwelling adults are affected.[2] However, reported prevalence figures vary. A prevalence of 8.39% among non-institutionalized U.S adults between 2005 and 2010 has been reported, and among institutionalized elders figures come close to 50%.[3][4]

Fecal incontinence
Other namesFaecal incontinence, bowel incontinence, anal incontinence, accidental bowel leakage
A diagram showing normal anatomy of the anal canal and rectum.
SpecialtyGastroenterology 
CausesPuerperal disorder, ulcerative colitis
Medicationcholestyramine
Frequency2.2%

Fecal incontinence has three main consequences: local reactions of the perianal skin and urinary tract, including maceration (softening and whitening of the skin due to continuous moisture), urinary tract infections, or decubitus ulcers (pressure sores);[1] a financial expense for individuals (due to the cost of medication and incontinence products, and loss of productivity), employers (days off), and medical insurers and society generally (health care costs, unemployment);[1] and an associated decrease in quality of life.[5] There is often reduced self-esteem, shame, humiliation, depression, a need to organize life around easy access to a toilet, and avoidance of enjoyable activities.[1] FI is an example of a stigmatized medical condition, which creates barriers to successful management and makes the problem worse.[6] People may be too embarrassed to seek medical help and attempt to self-manage the symptom in secrecy from others.

FI is one of the most psychologically and socially debilitating conditions in an otherwise healthy individual and is generally treatable.[2] More than 50% of hospitalized seriously ill patients rated bladder or fecal incontinence as "worse than death".[7] Management may be achieved through an individualized mix of dietary, pharmacologic, and surgical measures. Health care professionals are often poorly informed about treatment options,[2] and may fail to recognize the effect of FI.[5]

Signs and symptoms edit

FI affects virtually all aspects of peoples' lives, greatly diminishing physical and mental health, and affecting personal, social, and professional life. Emotional effects may include stress, fearfulness, anxiety, exhaustion, fear of public humiliation, feeling dirty, poor body image, reduced desire for sex, anger, humiliation, depression, isolation, secrecy, frustration, and embarrassment. Some patients cope by controlling their emotions or behavior. Physical symptoms such as skin soreness, pain and odor may also affect quality of life. Physical activity such as shopping or exercise is often affected. Travel may be affected, requiring careful planning. Working is also affected for most. Relationships, social activities and self-image likewise often suffer.[8] Symptoms may worsen over time.[1]

Causes edit

FI is a sign or a symptom, not a diagnosis,[8] and represents an extensive list of causes. Usually, it is the result of a complex interplay of several coexisting factors, many of which may be simple to correct.[8] Up to 80% of people may have more than one abnormality that is contributing.[9] Deficits of individual functional components of the continence mechanism can be partially compensated for a certain period, until the compensating components themselves fail. For example, obstetric injury may precede onset by decades, but postmenopausal changes in the tissue strength reduce in turn the competence of the compensatory mechanisms.[1][10] The most common factors in the development are thought to be obstetric injury and after-effects of anorectal surgery, especially those involving the anal sphincters and hemorrhoidal vascular cushions.[1] The majority of incontinent persons over the age of 18 fall into one of several groups: those with structural anorectal abnormalities (sphincter trauma, sphincter degeneration, perianal fistula, rectal prolapse), neurological disorders (multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, spina bifida, stroke, etc.), constipation/fecal loading (presence of a large amount of feces in the rectum with stool of any consistency), cognitive and/or behavioral dysfunction (dementia, learning disabilities), diarrhea, inflammatory bowel diseases (e.g. ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease), irritable bowel syndrome, disability related (people who are frail, acutely unwell, or have chronic/acute disabilities), and those cases which are idiopathic (of unknown cause).[8][11] Diabetes mellitus is also known to be a cause, but the mechanism of this relationship is not well understood.[12]

Congenital edit

Anorectal anomalies and spinal cord defects may be a cause in children. These are usually picked up and operated upon during early life, but continence is often imperfect thereafter.[2]

Anal canal edit

The functioning of the anal canal can be damaged, traumatically or atraumatically. The resting tone of the anal canal is not the only important factor; both the length of the high-pressure zone and its radial translation of force are required for continence. This means that even with normal anal canal pressure, focal defects such as the keyhole deformity can be the cause of substantial symptoms. External anal sphincter (EAS) dysfunction is associated with impaired voluntary control, whereas internal anal sphincter (IAS) dysfunction is associated with impaired fine-tuning of fecal control.[1] Lesions which mechanically interfere with, or prevent the complete closure of the anal canal can cause a liquid stool or mucous rectal discharge. Such lesions include piles (inflamed hemorrhoids), anal fissures, anal cancer, or fistulae. Obstetric injury may tear the anal sphincters, and some of these injuries may be occult (undetected). The risk of injury is greatest when labor has been especially difficult or prolonged, when forceps are used, with higher birth weights, or when a midline episiotomy is performed. Only when there is post-operative investigation of FI such as endoanal ultrasound is the injury discovered.[2] FI is a much under-reported complication of surgery. The IAS is easily damaged with an anal retractor (especially the Park's anal retractor), leading to reduced resting pressure postoperatively. Since the hemorrhoidal vascular cushions contribute 15% of the resting anal tone, surgeries involving these structures may affect continence status.[2] Partial internal sphincterotomy, fistulotomy, anal stretch (Lord's operation), hemorrhoidectomy or transanal advancement flaps may all lead to FI postoperatively, with soiling being far more common than solid FI. The "keyhole deformity" refers to scarring within the anal canal and is another cause of mucus leakage and minor incontinence. This defect is also described as a groove in the anal canal wall and may occur after posterior midline fissurectomy or fistulotomy, or with lateral IAS defects. Rare causes of traumatic injury to the anal sphincters include military or traffic accidents complicated by pelvic fractures, spine injuries or perineal lacerations, insertion of foreign bodies in the rectum, and sexual abuse.[2] Nontraumatic conditions causing anal sphincter weakness include scleroderma, damage to the pudendal nerves, and IAS degeneration of unknown cause.[5] Radiation-induced FI may involve the anal canal as well as the rectum, when proctitis, anal fistula formation, and diminished function of internal and external sphincter occur.[2] Irradiation may occur during radiotherapy, e.g. for prostate cancer.

Pelvic floor edit

Many people with FI have a generalized weakness of the pelvic floor, especially puborectalis.[5] A weakened puborectalis leads to widening of the anorectal angle and impaired barrier to the stool in the rectum entering the anal canal, and this is associated with incontinence to solids. Abnormal descent of the pelvic floor can also be a sign of pelvic floor weakness. Abnormal descent manifests as descending perineum syndrome (>4 cm perineal descent).[5] This syndrome initially gives constipation, and later FI. The pelvic floor is innervated by the pudendal nerve and the S3 and S4 branches of the pelvic plexus. With recurrent straining, e.g. during difficult labour or long-term constipation, then stretch injury can damage the nerves supplying levator ani. The pudendal nerve is especially vulnerable to irreversible damage, (stretch-induced pudendal neuropathy) which can occur with a 12% stretch.[2] If the pelvic floor muscles lose their innervation, they cease to contract and their muscle fibres are in time replaced by fibrous tissue, which is associated with pelvic floor weakness and incontinence. Increased pudendal nerve terminal motor latency may indicate pelvic floor weakness. The various types of pelvic organ prolapse (e.g. external rectal prolapse, mucosal prolapse and internal rectal intussusception & solitary rectal ulcer syndrome) may also cause coexisting obstructed defecation.[citation needed]

Rectum edit

The rectum needs to be of a sufficient volume to store stool until defecation. The rectal walls need to be "compliant" i.e. able to distend to an extent to accommodate stool. Rectal sensation is required to detect the presence, nature, and amount of rectal contents. The rectum must also be able to evacuate its contents fully. There must also be efficient coordination of rectal sensation and relaxation of the anal canal.[13] Rectal storage capacity (i.e. rectal volume + rectal compliance) may be affected in the following ways. Surgery involving the rectum (e.g. lower anterior resection, often performed for colorectal cancer), radiotherapy directed at the rectum, and inflammatory bowel disease can cause scarring, which may result in the walls of the rectum becoming stiff and inelastic, reducing compliance. Reduced rectal storage capacity may lead to urge incontinence, where there is an urgent need to defecate as soon as stool enters the rectum, where normally stool would be stored until there was enough to distend the rectal walls and initiate the defecation cycle. Tumors and strictures also may impair reservoir function. Conversely, increased rectal volume (megarectum), may cause fecal loading and overflow FI. Reduced rectal sensation may be a contributory factor.[citation needed] If the sensory nerves are damaged, the detection of stool in the rectum is dulled or absent, and the person will not feel the need to defecate until too late. Rectal hyposensitivity may manifest as constipation, FI, or both. Rectal hyposensitivity was reported to be present in 10% of people with FI.[14] Pudendal neuropathy is one cause of rectal hyposensitivity and may lead to fecal loading/impaction, megarectum and overflow FI.[15] Normal evacuation of rectal contents is 90–100%.[2] If there is incomplete evacuation during defecation, residual stool will be left in the rectum and threaten continence once defecation is finished. This is a feature of people with soiling secondary to obstructed defecation.[16] Obstructed defecation is often due to anismus (paradoxical contraction or relaxation failure of the puborectalis).[2]: 38  Whilst anismus is largely a functional disorder, organic pathologic lesions may mechanically interfere with rectal evacuation. Other causes of incomplete evacuation include non-emptying defects like a rectocele. Straining to defecate pushes stool into the rectocele, which acts like a diverticulum and causes stool sequestration. Once the voluntary attempt to defecate, albeit dysfunctional, is finished, the voluntary muscles relax, and residual rectal contents are then able to descend into the anal canal and cause leaking.[2]: 37 

Drugs that may exacerbate FI and diarrhea[17]
Drug/mechanism of action Common examples
Drugs altering sphincter tone

Nitrates, calcium channel antagonists, beta-adrenoceptor antagonists (beta-blockers), sildenafil, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors

Broad-spectrum antibiotics

Cephalosporins, penicillins, macrolides

Topical drugs applied to the anus (reducing pressure)

Glyceryl trinitrate ointment, diltiazem gel, bethanechol cream, botulinum toxin A injection

Drugs causing profuse diarrhea

Laxatives, metformin, orlistat, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, magnesium-containing antacids, digoxin

Constipating drugs

Loperamide, opioids, tricyclic antidepressants, aluminium-containing antacids, codeine

Tranquilisers/hypnotics (reducing alertness)

Benzodiazepines, tricyclic antidepressants, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, anti-psychotics

Central nervous system edit

Continence requires conscious and subconscious networking of information from and to the anorectum. Defects/brain damage may affect the central nervous system focally (e.g. stroke, tumor, spinal cord lesions, trauma, multiple sclerosis) or diffusely (e.g. dementia, multiple sclerosis, infection, Parkinson's disease or drug-induced).[1][18] FI (and urinary incontinence) may also occur during epileptic seizures.[19] Dural ectasia is an example of a spinal cord lesion that may affect continence.[20]

Diarrhea edit

Liquid stool is more difficult to control than formed, solid stool. Hence, FI can be exacerbated by diarrhea.[8] Some consider diarrhea to be the most common aggravating factor.[2][citation needed] Where diarrhea is caused by temporary problems such as mild infections or food reactions, incontinence tends to be short-lived. Chronic conditions, such as irritable bowel syndrome or Crohn's disease, can cause severe diarrhea lasting for weeks or months. Diseases, drugs, and indigestible dietary fats that interfere with the intestineal absorption may cause steatorrhea (oily rectal discharge & fatty diarrhea) and degrees of FI. Respective examples include cystic fibrosis, orlistat, and olestra. Postcholecystectomy diarrhea is diarrhea that occurs following gall bladder removal, due to excess bile acid.[21] Orlistat is an anti-obesity (weight loss) drug that blocks the absorption of fats. This may give side effects of FI, diarrhea, and steatorrhea.[22]

Overflow incontinence edit

This may occur when there is a large mass of feces in the rectum (fecal loading), which may become hardened (fecal impaction). Liquid stool elements can pass around the obstruction, leading to incontinence. Megarectum (enlarged rectal volume) and rectal hyposensitivity are associated with overflow incontinence. Hospitalized patients and care home residents may develop FI via this mechanism,[8] possibly a result of lack of mobility, reduced alertness, the constipating effect of medication, and/or dehydration.

Pathophysiology edit

 
Stylized diagram showing the action of the puborectalis sling, the looping of the puborectalis muscle around the bowel. This pulls the bowel forwards and forms the anorectal angle, the angle between the anal canal and the rectum. A-puborectalis, B-rectum, C-level of the anorectal ring and anorectal angle, D-anal canal, E-anal verge, F-representation of internal and external anal sphincters, G-coccyx & sacrum, H-pubic symphysis, I-Ischium, J-pubic bone.
 
Structure of anal canal

The mechanisms and factors contributing to normal continence are multiple and interrelated. The puborectalis sling, forming the anorectal angle (see diagram), is responsible for the gross continence of solid stool.[5] The IAS is an involuntary muscle, contributing about 55% of the resting anal pressure. Together with the hemorrhoidal vascular cushions, the IAS maintains continence of flatus and liquid during rest. The EAS is a voluntary muscle, that doubles the pressure in the anal canal during contraction, which is possible for a short time. The rectoanal inhibitory reflex (RAIR) is an involuntary IAS relaxation in response to rectal distension, allowing some rectal contents to descend into the anal canal where it is brought into contact with specialized sensory mucosa to detect consistency. The rectoanal excitatory reflex (RAER) is an initial, semi-voluntary contraction of the EAS and puborectalis which in turn prevents incontinence following the RAIR. Other factors include the specialized anti-peristaltic function of the last part of the sigmoid colon, which keeps the rectum empty most of the time, sensation in the lining of the rectum and the anal canal to detect when there is stool present, its consistency and quantity, and the presence of normal rectoanal reflexes and defecation cycle which completely evacuates stool from the rectum and anal canal. Problems affecting any of these mechanisms and factors may be involved in the cause.[2]

Diagnosis edit

Identification of the exact causes usually begins with a thorough medical history, including detailed questioning about symptoms, bowel habits, diet, medication, and other medical problems. Digital rectal examination is performed to assess resting pressure and voluntary contraction (maximum squeeze) of the sphincter complex and puborectalis. Anal sphincter defects, rectal prolapse, and abnormal perineal descent may be detected.[5] Anorectal physiology tests assess the functioning of the anorectal anatomy. Anorectal manometry records the pressure exerted by the anal sphincters and puborectalis during rest and contraction. The procedure is also able to assess the sensitivity of the anal canal and rectum. Anal electromyography tests for nerve damage, which is often associated with obstetric injury. Pudendal nerve terminal motor latency tests for damage to the pudendal motor nerves. Proctography, also known as defecography, shows how much stool the rectum can hold, how well the rectum holds it, and how well the rectum can evacuate the stool. It will also highlight defects in the structure of the rectum such as internal rectal intussusception. Dynamic pelvic MRI, also called MRI defecography is an alternative that is better for some problems but not as good for other problems.[23] Proctosigmoidoscopy involves the insertion of an endoscope (a long, thin, flexible tube with a camera) into the anal canal, rectum and sigmoid colon. The procedure allows for visualization of the interior of the gut and may detect signs of disease or other problems that could be a cause, such as inflammation, tumors, or scar tissue. Endoanal ultrasound, which some consider the gold standard for detection of anal canal lesions,[24] evaluates the structure of the anal sphincters and may detect occult sphincter tears that otherwise would go unseen.

Functional FI is common.[25] The Rome process published diagnostic criteria for functional FI, which they defined as "recurrent uncontrolled passage of fecal material in an individual with a developmental age of at least four years". The diagnostic criteria are, one or more of the following factors present for the last 3 months: abnormal functioning of normally innervated and structurally intact muscles, minor abnormalities of sphincter structure/innervation (nerve supply), normal or disordered bowel habits, (i.e., fecal retention or diarrhea), and psychological causes. Furthermore, exclusion criteria are given. These are factors that all must be excluded for a diagnosis of functional FI, and are abnormal innervation caused by lesion(s) within the brain (e.g., dementia), spinal cord (at or below T12), or sacral nerve roots, or mixed lesions (e.g., multiple sclerosis), or as part of a generalized peripheral or autonomic neuropathy (e.g., due to diabetes), anal sphincter abnormalities associated with a multisystem disease (e.g., scleroderma), and structural or neurogenic abnormalities that are the major cause.[26]

Definition edit

There is no globally accepted definition,[1] but fecal incontinence is generally defined as the recurrent inability to voluntarily control the passage of bowel contents through the anal canal and expel it at a socially acceptable location and time, occurring in individuals over the age of four.[1][2][5][8][10] "Social continence" has been given various precise definitions for the purposes of research; however, generally it refers to symptoms being controlled to an extent that is acceptable to the individual in question, with no significant effect on their life. There is no consensus about the best way to classify FI,[8] and several methods are used.

Symptoms can be directly or indirectly related to the loss of bowel control. The direct (primary) symptom is a lack of control over bowel contents which tends to worsen without treatment. Indirect (secondary) symptoms, which are the result of leakage, include pruritus ani (an intense itching sensation from the anus), perianal dermatitis (irritation and inflammation of the skin around the anus), and urinary tract infections.[1] Due to embarrassment, people may only mention secondary symptoms rather than acknowledge incontinence. Any major underlying cause will produce additional signs and symptoms, such as protrusion of mucosa in external rectal prolapse. Symptoms of fecal leakage (FL) are similar and may occur after defecation. There may be loss of small amounts of brown fluid and staining of the underwear.[2]

Types edit

FI can be divided into those people who experience a defecation urge before leakage (urge incontinence), and those who experience no sensation before leakage (passive incontinence or soiling).[8] Urge incontinence is characterized by a sudden need to defecate, with little time to reach a toilet. Urge and passive FI may be associated with weakness of the external anal sphincter (EAS) and internal anal sphincter (IAS) respectively. Urgency may also be associated with reduced rectal volume, reduced ability of the rectal walls to distend and accommodate stool, and increased rectal sensitivity.[5]

There is a continuous spectrum of different clinical presentations from incontinence of flatus (gas), through incontinence of mucus or liquid stool, to solids. The term anal incontinence often is used to describe flatus incontinence,[8] however it is also used as a synonym for FI generally. It may occur together with incontinence of liquids or solids, or it may present in isolation. Flatus incontinence may be the first sign of FI.[2] Once continence to flatus is lost, it is rarely restored.[8] Anal incontinence may be equally disabling as the other types.[27] Fecal leakage, fecal soiling and fecal seepage are minor degrees of FI, and describe incontinence of liquid stool, mucus, or very small amounts of solid stool. They cover a spectrum of increasing symptom severity (staining, soiling, seepage, and accidents).[1] Rarely, minor FI in adults may be described as encopresis. Fecal leakage is a related topic to rectal discharge, but this term does not necessarily imply any degree of incontinence. Discharge generally refers to conditions where there is pus or increased mucus production, or anatomical lesions that prevent the anal canal from closing fully, whereas fecal leakage generally concerns disorders of IAS function and functional evacuation disorders which cause a solid fecal mass to be retained in the rectum. Solid stool incontinence may be called complete (or major) incontinence, and anything less as partial (or minor) incontinence (i.e. incontinence of flatus (gas), liquid stool and/or mucus).[2]

In children over the age of four who have been toilet trained, a similar condition is generally termed encopresis (or soiling), which refers to the voluntary or involuntary loss of (usually soft or semi-liquid) stool.[28] The term pseudoincontinence is used when there is FI in children who have anatomical defects (e.g. enlarged sigmoid colon or anal stenosis).[2] Encopresis is a term that is usually applied when there are no such anatomical defects present. The ICD-10 classifies nonorganic encopresis under "behavioural and emotional disorders with onset usually occurring in childhood and adolescence" and organic causes of encopresis along with FI.[29] FI can also be classified according to gender, since the cause in females may be different from males, for example it may develop following radical prostatectomy in males,[30] whereas females may develop FI as an immediate or delayed consequence of damage whilst giving birth. Pelvic anatomy is also different according to gender, with a wider pelvic outlet in females.[citation needed]

Clinical measurement edit

Several severity scales exist. The Cleveland Clinic (Wexner) fecal incontinence score takes into account five parameters that are scored on a scale from zero (absent) to four (daily) frequency of incontinence to gas, liquid, solid, of need to wear pad, and of lifestyle changes.[1] The Park's incontinence score uses four categories:

  1. those continent for solid and liquid stool and also for flatus.
  2. those continent for solid and liquid stool but incontinent for flatus (with or without urgency).
  3. those continent for solid stool but incontinent for liquid stool or flatus.
  4. those incontinent to formed stool (complete incontinence).[31]

The fecal incontinence severity index is based on four types of leakage (gas, mucus, liquid stool, solid stool) and five frequencies (once to three times per month, once per week, twice per week, once per day, twice or more per day). Other severity scales include AMS, Pescatori, Williams score, Kirwan, Miller score, Saint Mark's score, and the Vaizey scale.[2]

Differential diagnosis edit

FI may present with signs similar to rectal discharge (e.g. fistulae, proctitis, or rectal prolapse), pseudoincontinence, encopresis (with no organic cause), and irritable bowel syndrome.[2]

Management edit

Stool consistency Cause First line Second line
Diarrhea Inflammatory Anti-inflammatory drugs Constipating drugs
Pseudodiarrhea Encopresis Laxatives Lavage
Solid Pelvic floor Biofeedback Sacral nerve stimulation
Sphincter intact Sacral nerve stimulation Lavage
Sphincter rupture Anal repair Sacral nerve stimulation/Neosphincter
Anal atresia Lavage Neosphincter
Rectal prolapse Rectopexy Perineal resection
Soiling Keyhole defect Lavage PTQ implant

FI is generally treatable with conservative management, surgery, or both.[2] The success of treatment depends upon the exact causes and how easily these are corrected.[8] Treatment choice depends on the cause and severity of the disease, and the motivation and general health of the person affected. Commonly, conservative measures are used together, and if appropriate surgery is carried out. Treatments may be attempted until symptoms are satisfactorily controlled. A treatment algorithm based upon the cause has been proposed, including conservative, non-operative and surgical measures (neosphincter refers to either dynamic graciloplasty or artificial bowel sphincter, lavage refers to retrograde rectal irrigation).[2]

 
Incontinence products

Conservative measures include dietary modification, drug treatment, retrograde anal irrigation, biofeedback retraining anal sphincter exercises. Incontinence products refer to devices such as anal plugs and perineal pads and garments such as diapers/nappies. Perineal pads are efficient and acceptable for only minor incontinence.[2] If all other measures are ineffective removing the entire colon may be an option.[citation needed]

Diet edit

Dietary modification may be important for successful management.[5] Both diarrhea and constipation can contribute to different cases, so dietary advice must be tailored to address the underlying cause or it may be ineffective or counterproductive. In persons with disease aggravated by diarrhea or those with rectal loading by soft stools, the following suggestions may be beneficial: increase dietary fiber; reduce wholegrain cereals/bread; reduce fruit and vegetables which contain natural laxative compounds (rhubarb, figs, prunes/plums); limit beans, pulses, cabbage and sprouts; reduce spices (especially chili); reduce artificial sweeteners (e.g. sugar-free chewing gum); reduce alcohol (especially stout, beer and ale); reduce lactose if there is some degree of lactase deficiency; and reduce caffeine. Caffeine lowers the resting tone of the anal canal and also causes diarrhea. Excessive doses of vitamin C, magnesium, phosphorus and/or calcium supplements may increase FI. Reducing the olestra fat substitute, which can cause diarrhea, may also help.[32]

Medication edit

Pharmacological management may include anti-diarrheal/constipating agents and laxatives/stool bulking agents. Stopping or substituting any previous medication that causes diarrhea may be helpful in some (see table). There is no good evidence for the use of any medications, however.[33]

In people who have undergone gallbladder removal, the bile acid sequestrant cholestyramine may help minor degrees of FI.[34] Bulking agents also absorb water, so may be helpful for those with diarrhea. A common side effect is bloating and flatulence. Topical agents to treat and prevent dermatitis may also be used, such as topical antifungals when there is evidence of perianal candidiasis or occasionally mild topical anti-inflammatory medication. Prevention of secondary lesions is carried out by perineal cleansing, moisturization, and the use of a skin protectant.[35]

Other measures edit

Evacuation aids (suppositories or enemas) e.g. glycerine or bisacodyl suppositories may be prescribed. People may have a poor resting tone of the anal canal, and consequently may not be able to retain an enema, in which case transanal irrigation (retrograde anal irrigation) may be a better option, as this equipment utilizes an inflatable catheter to prevent loss of the irrigation tip and to provide a water tight seal during irrigation. A volume of lukewarm water is gently pumped into the colon via the anus. People can be taught how to perform this treatment in their own homes, but it does require special equipment. If the irrigation is efficient, the stool will not reach the rectum again for up to 48 hours.[36] By regularly emptying the bowel using transanal irrigation, controlled bowel function is often re-established to a high degree in patients with bowel incontinence and/or constipation. This enables control over the time and place of evacuation and the development of a consistent bowel routine.[36] However, persistent leaking of residual irrigation fluid during the day may occur and make this option unhelpful, particularly in persons with obstructed defecation syndrome who may have an incomplete evacuation of any rectal contents. Consequently, the best time to carry out the irrigation is typically in the evening, allowing any residual liquid to be passed the next morning before leaving the home. Complications such as electrolyte imbalance and perforation are rare. The effect of transanal irrigation varies considerably. Some individuals experience complete control of incontinence, and others report little or no benefit.[36] It has been suggested that if appropriate, people be offered home retrograde anal irrigation.[8]

Biofeedback (the use of equipment to record or amplify and then feed back activities of the body) is a commonly used and researched treatment, but the benefits are uncertain.[37] Biofeedback therapy varies in the way it is delivered, but it is unknown if one type has benefits over another.[37]

The role of pelvic floor exercises and anal sphincter exercises in FI is poorly determined. While there may be some benefits they appear less useful than implanted sacral nerve stimulators. These exercises aim to increase the strength of the pelvic floor muscles (mainly levator ani). The anal sphincters are not technically part of the pelvic floor muscle group, but the EAS is a voluntary, striated muscle that therefore can be strengthened in a similar manner. It has not been established whether pelvic floor exercises can be distinguished from anal sphincter exercises in practice by the people doing them. This kind of exercise is more commonly used to treat urinary incontinence, for which there is a sound evidence base for effectiveness. More rarely are they used in FI. The effect of anal sphincter exercises are variously stated as an increase in the strength, speed, or endurance of voluntary contraction (EAS).[37]

Electrical stimulation can also be applied to the anal sphincters and pelvic floor muscles, inducing muscle contraction without traditional exercises (similar to transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, TENS). The evidence supporting its use is limited, and any benefit is tentative.[38] In light of the above, intra-anal electrical stimulation (using an anal probe as an electrode) appears to be more efficacious than intra-vaginal (using a vaginal probe as an electrode).[38] Rarely, skin reactions may occur where the electrodes are placed, but these issues typically resolve when the stimulation is stopped. Surgically implanted sacral nerve stimulation may be more effective than exercises, and electrical stimulation and biofeedback may be more effective than exercises or electrical stimulation by themselves.[37] TENS is also sometimes used to treat FI by transcutaneous tibial nerve stimulation.[39]

In a minority of people, anal plugs may be useful for either standalone therapy or in concert with other treatments.[40] Anal plugs (sometimes termed tampons) aim to block the involuntary loss of fecal material, and they vary in design and composition.[8] Polyurethane plugs were reported to perform better than those made of polyvinyl-alcohol.[40] Plugs are less likely to help those with frequent bowel movements,[2] and many find them difficult to tolerate.[40]

In women, a device that functions as an inflatable balloon in the vagina has been approved for use in the United States.[41]

Surgery edit

Surgery may be carried out if conservative measures alone are not sufficient to control incontinence. There are many surgical options, and their relative effectiveness is debated due to a lack of good-quality evidence. The optimal treatment regime may be both surgical and non-surgical treatments.[42] The surgical options can be considered in four categories: restoration and improvement of residual sphincter function (sphincteroplasty, sacral nerve stimulation, tibial nerve stimulation, correction of anorectal deformity), replacement/imitation of the sphincter or its function (anal encirclement, SECCA procedure, non-dynamic graciloplasty, perianal injectable bulking agents), dynamic sphincter replacement (artificial bowel sphincter, dynamic graciloplasty), antegrade continence enema (Malone procedure), and finally fecal diversion (e.g. colostomy).[1] A surgical treatment algorithm has been proposed. Isolated sphincter defects (IAS/EAS) may be initially treated with sphincteroplasty and if this fails, the person can be assessed for sacral nerve stimulation. Functional deficits of the EAS and/or IAS (i.e. where there is no structural defect, or only limited EAS structural defect, or with neurogenic incontinence) may be assessed for sacral nerve stimulation. If this fails, neosphincter with either dynamic graciloplasty or artificial anal sphincter may be indicated. Substantial muscular and/or neural defects may be treated with neosphincter initially.[10]

Epidemiology edit

FI is thought to be very common,[1] but much under-reported due to embarrassment. One study reported a prevalence of 2.2% in the general population.[2] It affects people of all ages but is more common in older adults (but it should not be considered a normal part of aging).[43] Females are more likely to develop it than males (63% of those with FI over 30 may be female).[1] In 2014, the National Center for Health Statistics reported that one out of every six seniors in the U.S. who lived in their own homes or apartment had FI. Men and women were equally affected.[44] 45–50% of people with FI have severe physical and/or mental disabilities.[1] People with dementia are four times more likely to have fecal incontinence compared to people of similar ages.[45][46]

Risk factors include age, female gender, urinary incontinence, history of vaginal delivery (non-Caesarean section childbirth), obesity,[27] prior anorectal surgery, poor general health, and physical limitations. Combined urinary and fecal incontinence is sometimes termed double incontinence, and it is more likely to be present in those with urinary incontinence.[47]

Traditionally, FI was thought to be an insignificant complication of surgery, but it is now known that a variety of different procedures are associated with this possible complication, and sometimes at high levels. Examples are midline internal sphincterotomy (8% risk), lateral internal sphincterotomy, fistulectomy, fistulotomy (18–52%), hemorrhoidectomy (33%), ileo-anal reservoir reconstruction, lower anterior resection, total abdominal colectomy, ureterosigmoidostomy,[27] and anal dilation (Lord's procedure, 0-50%).[48] Some authors consider obstetric trauma to be the most common cause.[49]

History edit

While the first mention of urinary incontinence occurs in 1500 BC in the Ebers Papyrus, the first mention of FI in a medical context is unknown.[50] For many centuries, colonic irrigation was the only treatment available. Stoma creation was described in AD 1776, FI associated with rectal prolapse in AD 1873 and anterior sphincter repair in AD 1875. During the mid 20th century, several operations were developed for instances where the sphincters were intact but weakened.[51] Muscle transpositions using the gluteus maximus or the gracilis were devised, but did not become used widely until later. End-to-end sphincteroplasty is shown to have a high failure rate in 1940. In AD 1971, Parks and McPartlin first describe an overlapping sphincteroplasty procedure. Biofeedback is first introduced in 1974.[52] In 1975, Parks describes post anal repair, a technique to reinforce the pelvic floor and EAS to treat idiopathic cases. Endoanal ultrasound is invented in 1991, which starts to demonstrate the high number of occult sphincter tears following vaginal deliveries. In 1994, the use of an endoanal coil during pelvic MRI shows greater detail of the anal canal than previously. During the last 20 years, dynamic graciliplasty, sacral nerve stimulation, injectable perianal bulking agents and radiofrequency ablation have been devised, mainly due to the relatively poor success rates and high morbidity associated with the earlier procedures.[51]

Society and culture edit

Persons with this symptom are frequently ridiculed and ostracized in public. It has been described as one of the most psychologically and socially debilitating conditions in an otherwise healthy individual. In older people, it is one of the most common reasons for admission into a care home. Persons who develop FI earlier in life are less likely to marry and obtain employment. Often, people will go to great lengths to keep their condition secret. It has been termed "the silent affliction" since many do not discuss the problem with their close family, employers, or clinicians. They may be subject to gossip, hostility, and other forms of social exclusion.[53][54][55] The economic cost has not received much attention.

Netherlands edit

In the Netherlands, a 2004 study estimated that total costs of patients with fecal incontinence were €2169 per patient per year. Over half of this was productivity loss in work.[56]

United States edit

In the US, the average lifetime cost (treatment and follow-up) was $17,166 per person in 1996. The average hospital charge for sphincteroplasty was $8555 per procedure. Overall, in the US, the total charges associated with surgery increased from $34 million in 1998 to $57.5 million in 2003. Sacral nerve stimulation, dynamic graciloplasty, and colostomy were all shown to be cost-effective.[57]

Japan edit

Some insults in Japan relate to incontinence, such as kusotare/kusottare and shikkotare which mean shit hanger/leaker/oozer and piss leaker/oozer respectively, though these have not been in common use since the 1980s.[58]

Law edit

The case Hiltibran et al v. Levy et al in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri resulted in that court issuing an order in 2011. That order requires incontinence briefs funded by Medicaid to be given by the State of Missouri to adults who would be institutionalized without them.[59][60][61]

Research edit

Engineered anal sphincters grown from stem cells have been successfully implanted in mice. New blood vessels developed and the tissue displayed normal contraction and relaxation. In the future, these methods may become part of the management of FI, replacing the need for high-morbidity implanted devices such as the artificial bowel sphincter.[62]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Brown HW, Wexner SD, Segall MM, Brezoczky KL, Lukacz ES (November 2012). "Accidental bowel leakage in the mature women's health study: prevalence and predictors". International Journal of Clinical Practice. 66 (11): 1101–1108. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.1053.586. doi:10.1111/ijcp.12018. PMID 23067034. S2CID 3225854.
  • Brown HW, Wexner SD, Segall MM, Brezoczky KL, Lukacz ES (November 2012). "Quality of life impact in women with accidental bowel leakage". International Journal of Clinical Practice. 66 (11): 1109–1116. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.1077.4498. doi:10.1111/ijcp.12017. PMID 23067035. S2CID 22379780.

External links edit

  • Independent continence product advisor

fecal, incontinence, some, forms, encopresis, lack, control, over, defecation, leading, involuntary, loss, bowel, contents, both, liquid, stool, elements, mucus, solid, feces, when, this, loss, includes, flatus, referred, anal, incontinence, sign, symptom, dia. Fecal incontinence FI or in some forms encopresis is a lack of control over defecation leading to involuntary loss of bowel contents both liquid stool elements and mucus or solid feces When this loss includes flatus gas it is referred to as anal incontinence FI is a sign or a symptom not a diagnosis Incontinence can result from different causes and might occur with either constipation or diarrhea Continence is maintained by several interrelated factors including the anal sampling mechanism and incontinence usually results from a deficiency of multiple mechanisms The most common causes are thought to be immediate or delayed damage from childbirth complications from prior anorectal surgery especially involving the anal sphincters or hemorrhoidal vascular cushions altered bowel habits e g caused by irritable bowel syndrome Crohn s disease ulcerative colitis food intolerance or constipation with overflow incontinence 1 An estimated 2 2 of community dwelling adults are affected 2 However reported prevalence figures vary A prevalence of 8 39 among non institutionalized U S adults between 2005 and 2010 has been reported and among institutionalized elders figures come close to 50 3 4 Fecal incontinenceOther namesFaecal incontinence bowel incontinence anal incontinence accidental bowel leakageA diagram showing normal anatomy of the anal canal and rectum SpecialtyGastroenterology CausesPuerperal disorder ulcerative colitisMedicationcholestyramineFrequency2 2 Fecal incontinence has three main consequences local reactions of the perianal skin and urinary tract including maceration softening and whitening of the skin due to continuous moisture urinary tract infections or decubitus ulcers pressure sores 1 a financial expense for individuals due to the cost of medication and incontinence products and loss of productivity employers days off and medical insurers and society generally health care costs unemployment 1 and an associated decrease in quality of life 5 There is often reduced self esteem shame humiliation depression a need to organize life around easy access to a toilet and avoidance of enjoyable activities 1 FI is an example of a stigmatized medical condition which creates barriers to successful management and makes the problem worse 6 People may be too embarrassed to seek medical help and attempt to self manage the symptom in secrecy from others FI is one of the most psychologically and socially debilitating conditions in an otherwise healthy individual and is generally treatable 2 More than 50 of hospitalized seriously ill patients rated bladder or fecal incontinence as worse than death 7 Management may be achieved through an individualized mix of dietary pharmacologic and surgical measures Health care professionals are often poorly informed about treatment options 2 and may fail to recognize the effect of FI 5 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 2 Causes 2 1 Congenital 2 2 Anal canal 2 3 Pelvic floor 2 4 Rectum 2 5 Central nervous system 2 6 Diarrhea 2 7 Overflow incontinence 3 Pathophysiology 4 Diagnosis 4 1 Definition 4 2 Types 4 3 Clinical measurement 4 4 Differential diagnosis 5 Management 5 1 Diet 5 2 Medication 5 3 Other measures 5 4 Surgery 6 Epidemiology 7 History 8 Society and culture 8 1 Netherlands 8 2 United States 8 3 Japan 8 4 Law 9 Research 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksSigns and symptoms editFI affects virtually all aspects of peoples lives greatly diminishing physical and mental health and affecting personal social and professional life Emotional effects may include stress fearfulness anxiety exhaustion fear of public humiliation feeling dirty poor body image reduced desire for sex anger humiliation depression isolation secrecy frustration and embarrassment Some patients cope by controlling their emotions or behavior Physical symptoms such as skin soreness pain and odor may also affect quality of life Physical activity such as shopping or exercise is often affected Travel may be affected requiring careful planning Working is also affected for most Relationships social activities and self image likewise often suffer 8 Symptoms may worsen over time 1 Causes editFI is a sign or a symptom not a diagnosis 8 and represents an extensive list of causes Usually it is the result of a complex interplay of several coexisting factors many of which may be simple to correct 8 Up to 80 of people may have more than one abnormality that is contributing 9 Deficits of individual functional components of the continence mechanism can be partially compensated for a certain period until the compensating components themselves fail For example obstetric injury may precede onset by decades but postmenopausal changes in the tissue strength reduce in turn the competence of the compensatory mechanisms 1 10 The most common factors in the development are thought to be obstetric injury and after effects of anorectal surgery especially those involving the anal sphincters and hemorrhoidal vascular cushions 1 The majority of incontinent persons over the age of 18 fall into one of several groups those with structural anorectal abnormalities sphincter trauma sphincter degeneration perianal fistula rectal prolapse neurological disorders multiple sclerosis spinal cord injury spina bifida stroke etc constipation fecal loading presence of a large amount of feces in the rectum with stool of any consistency cognitive and or behavioral dysfunction dementia learning disabilities diarrhea inflammatory bowel diseases e g ulcerative colitis Crohn s disease irritable bowel syndrome disability related people who are frail acutely unwell or have chronic acute disabilities and those cases which are idiopathic of unknown cause 8 11 Diabetes mellitus is also known to be a cause but the mechanism of this relationship is not well understood 12 Congenital edit Anorectal anomalies and spinal cord defects may be a cause in children These are usually picked up and operated upon during early life but continence is often imperfect thereafter 2 Anal canal edit The functioning of the anal canal can be damaged traumatically or atraumatically The resting tone of the anal canal is not the only important factor both the length of the high pressure zone and its radial translation of force are required for continence This means that even with normal anal canal pressure focal defects such as the keyhole deformity can be the cause of substantial symptoms External anal sphincter EAS dysfunction is associated with impaired voluntary control whereas internal anal sphincter IAS dysfunction is associated with impaired fine tuning of fecal control 1 Lesions which mechanically interfere with or prevent the complete closure of the anal canal can cause a liquid stool or mucous rectal discharge Such lesions include piles inflamed hemorrhoids anal fissures anal cancer or fistulae Obstetric injury may tear the anal sphincters and some of these injuries may be occult undetected The risk of injury is greatest when labor has been especially difficult or prolonged when forceps are used with higher birth weights or when a midline episiotomy is performed Only when there is post operative investigation of FI such as endoanal ultrasound is the injury discovered 2 FI is a much under reported complication of surgery The IAS is easily damaged with an anal retractor especially the Park s anal retractor leading to reduced resting pressure postoperatively Since the hemorrhoidal vascular cushions contribute 15 of the resting anal tone surgeries involving these structures may affect continence status 2 Partial internal sphincterotomy fistulotomy anal stretch Lord s operation hemorrhoidectomy or transanal advancement flaps may all lead to FI postoperatively with soiling being far more common than solid FI The keyhole deformity refers to scarring within the anal canal and is another cause of mucus leakage and minor incontinence This defect is also described as a groove in the anal canal wall and may occur after posterior midline fissurectomy or fistulotomy or with lateral IAS defects Rare causes of traumatic injury to the anal sphincters include military or traffic accidents complicated by pelvic fractures spine injuries or perineal lacerations insertion of foreign bodies in the rectum and sexual abuse 2 Nontraumatic conditions causing anal sphincter weakness include scleroderma damage to the pudendal nerves and IAS degeneration of unknown cause 5 Radiation induced FI may involve the anal canal as well as the rectum when proctitis anal fistula formation and diminished function of internal and external sphincter occur 2 Irradiation may occur during radiotherapy e g for prostate cancer Pelvic floor edit Many people with FI have a generalized weakness of the pelvic floor especially puborectalis 5 A weakened puborectalis leads to widening of the anorectal angle and impaired barrier to the stool in the rectum entering the anal canal and this is associated with incontinence to solids Abnormal descent of the pelvic floor can also be a sign of pelvic floor weakness Abnormal descent manifests as descending perineum syndrome gt 4 cm perineal descent 5 This syndrome initially gives constipation and later FI The pelvic floor is innervated by the pudendal nerve and the S3 and S4 branches of the pelvic plexus With recurrent straining e g during difficult labour or long term constipation then stretch injury can damage the nerves supplying levator ani The pudendal nerve is especially vulnerable to irreversible damage stretch induced pudendal neuropathy which can occur with a 12 stretch 2 If the pelvic floor muscles lose their innervation they cease to contract and their muscle fibres are in time replaced by fibrous tissue which is associated with pelvic floor weakness and incontinence Increased pudendal nerve terminal motor latency may indicate pelvic floor weakness The various types of pelvic organ prolapse e g external rectal prolapse mucosal prolapse and internal rectal intussusception amp solitary rectal ulcer syndrome may also cause coexisting obstructed defecation citation needed Rectum edit The rectum needs to be of a sufficient volume to store stool until defecation The rectal walls need to be compliant i e able to distend to an extent to accommodate stool Rectal sensation is required to detect the presence nature and amount of rectal contents The rectum must also be able to evacuate its contents fully There must also be efficient coordination of rectal sensation and relaxation of the anal canal 13 Rectal storage capacity i e rectal volume rectal compliance may be affected in the following ways Surgery involving the rectum e g lower anterior resection often performed for colorectal cancer radiotherapy directed at the rectum and inflammatory bowel disease can cause scarring which may result in the walls of the rectum becoming stiff and inelastic reducing compliance Reduced rectal storage capacity may lead to urge incontinence where there is an urgent need to defecate as soon as stool enters the rectum where normally stool would be stored until there was enough to distend the rectal walls and initiate the defecation cycle Tumors and strictures also may impair reservoir function Conversely increased rectal volume megarectum may cause fecal loading and overflow FI Reduced rectal sensation may be a contributory factor citation needed If the sensory nerves are damaged the detection of stool in the rectum is dulled or absent and the person will not feel the need to defecate until too late Rectal hyposensitivity may manifest as constipation FI or both Rectal hyposensitivity was reported to be present in 10 of people with FI 14 Pudendal neuropathy is one cause of rectal hyposensitivity and may lead to fecal loading impaction megarectum and overflow FI 15 Normal evacuation of rectal contents is 90 100 2 If there is incomplete evacuation during defecation residual stool will be left in the rectum and threaten continence once defecation is finished This is a feature of people with soiling secondary to obstructed defecation 16 Obstructed defecation is often due to anismus paradoxical contraction or relaxation failure of the puborectalis 2 38 Whilst anismus is largely a functional disorder organic pathologic lesions may mechanically interfere with rectal evacuation Other causes of incomplete evacuation include non emptying defects like a rectocele Straining to defecate pushes stool into the rectocele which acts like a diverticulum and causes stool sequestration Once the voluntary attempt to defecate albeit dysfunctional is finished the voluntary muscles relax and residual rectal contents are then able to descend into the anal canal and cause leaking 2 37 Drugs that may exacerbate FI and diarrhea 17 Drug mechanism of action Common examplesDrugs altering sphincter tone Nitrates calcium channel antagonists beta adrenoceptor antagonists beta blockers sildenafil selective serotonin reuptake inhibitorsBroad spectrum antibiotics Cephalosporins penicillins macrolidesTopical drugs applied to the anus reducing pressure Glyceryl trinitrate ointment diltiazem gel bethanechol cream botulinum toxin A injectionDrugs causing profuse diarrhea Laxatives metformin orlistat selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors magnesium containing antacids digoxinConstipating drugs Loperamide opioids tricyclic antidepressants aluminium containing antacids codeineTranquilisers hypnotics reducing alertness Benzodiazepines tricyclic antidepressants selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors anti psychoticsCentral nervous system edit Continence requires conscious and subconscious networking of information from and to the anorectum Defects brain damage may affect the central nervous system focally e g stroke tumor spinal cord lesions trauma multiple sclerosis or diffusely e g dementia multiple sclerosis infection Parkinson s disease or drug induced 1 18 FI and urinary incontinence may also occur during epileptic seizures 19 Dural ectasia is an example of a spinal cord lesion that may affect continence 20 Diarrhea edit Liquid stool is more difficult to control than formed solid stool Hence FI can be exacerbated by diarrhea 8 Some consider diarrhea to be the most common aggravating factor 2 citation needed Where diarrhea is caused by temporary problems such as mild infections or food reactions incontinence tends to be short lived Chronic conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome or Crohn s disease can cause severe diarrhea lasting for weeks or months Diseases drugs and indigestible dietary fats that interfere with the intestineal absorption may cause steatorrhea oily rectal discharge amp fatty diarrhea and degrees of FI Respective examples include cystic fibrosis orlistat and olestra Postcholecystectomy diarrhea is diarrhea that occurs following gall bladder removal due to excess bile acid 21 Orlistat is an anti obesity weight loss drug that blocks the absorption of fats This may give side effects of FI diarrhea and steatorrhea 22 Overflow incontinence edit This may occur when there is a large mass of feces in the rectum fecal loading which may become hardened fecal impaction Liquid stool elements can pass around the obstruction leading to incontinence Megarectum enlarged rectal volume and rectal hyposensitivity are associated with overflow incontinence Hospitalized patients and care home residents may develop FI via this mechanism 8 possibly a result of lack of mobility reduced alertness the constipating effect of medication and or dehydration Pathophysiology edit nbsp Stylized diagram showing the action of the puborectalis sling the looping of the puborectalis muscle around the bowel This pulls the bowel forwards and forms the anorectal angle the angle between the anal canal and the rectum A puborectalis B rectum C level of the anorectal ring and anorectal angle D anal canal E anal verge F representation of internal and external anal sphincters G coccyx amp sacrum H pubic symphysis I Ischium J pubic bone nbsp Structure of anal canalSee also Defecation The mechanisms and factors contributing to normal continence are multiple and interrelated The puborectalis sling forming the anorectal angle see diagram is responsible for the gross continence of solid stool 5 The IAS is an involuntary muscle contributing about 55 of the resting anal pressure Together with the hemorrhoidal vascular cushions the IAS maintains continence of flatus and liquid during rest The EAS is a voluntary muscle that doubles the pressure in the anal canal during contraction which is possible for a short time The rectoanal inhibitory reflex RAIR is an involuntary IAS relaxation in response to rectal distension allowing some rectal contents to descend into the anal canal where it is brought into contact with specialized sensory mucosa to detect consistency The rectoanal excitatory reflex RAER is an initial semi voluntary contraction of the EAS and puborectalis which in turn prevents incontinence following the RAIR Other factors include the specialized anti peristaltic function of the last part of the sigmoid colon which keeps the rectum empty most of the time sensation in the lining of the rectum and the anal canal to detect when there is stool present its consistency and quantity and the presence of normal rectoanal reflexes and defecation cycle which completely evacuates stool from the rectum and anal canal Problems affecting any of these mechanisms and factors may be involved in the cause 2 Diagnosis editIdentification of the exact causes usually begins with a thorough medical history including detailed questioning about symptoms bowel habits diet medication and other medical problems Digital rectal examination is performed to assess resting pressure and voluntary contraction maximum squeeze of the sphincter complex and puborectalis Anal sphincter defects rectal prolapse and abnormal perineal descent may be detected 5 Anorectal physiology tests assess the functioning of the anorectal anatomy Anorectal manometry records the pressure exerted by the anal sphincters and puborectalis during rest and contraction The procedure is also able to assess the sensitivity of the anal canal and rectum Anal electromyography tests for nerve damage which is often associated with obstetric injury Pudendal nerve terminal motor latency tests for damage to the pudendal motor nerves Proctography also known as defecography shows how much stool the rectum can hold how well the rectum holds it and how well the rectum can evacuate the stool It will also highlight defects in the structure of the rectum such as internal rectal intussusception Dynamic pelvic MRI also called MRI defecography is an alternative that is better for some problems but not as good for other problems 23 Proctosigmoidoscopy involves the insertion of an endoscope a long thin flexible tube with a camera into the anal canal rectum and sigmoid colon The procedure allows for visualization of the interior of the gut and may detect signs of disease or other problems that could be a cause such as inflammation tumors or scar tissue Endoanal ultrasound which some consider the gold standard for detection of anal canal lesions 24 evaluates the structure of the anal sphincters and may detect occult sphincter tears that otherwise would go unseen Functional FI is common 25 The Rome process published diagnostic criteria for functional FI which they defined as recurrent uncontrolled passage of fecal material in an individual with a developmental age of at least four years The diagnostic criteria are one or more of the following factors present for the last 3 months abnormal functioning of normally innervated and structurally intact muscles minor abnormalities of sphincter structure innervation nerve supply normal or disordered bowel habits i e fecal retention or diarrhea and psychological causes Furthermore exclusion criteria are given These are factors that all must be excluded for a diagnosis of functional FI and are abnormal innervation caused by lesion s within the brain e g dementia spinal cord at or below T12 or sacral nerve roots or mixed lesions e g multiple sclerosis or as part of a generalized peripheral or autonomic neuropathy e g due to diabetes anal sphincter abnormalities associated with a multisystem disease e g scleroderma and structural or neurogenic abnormalities that are the major cause 26 Definition edit There is no globally accepted definition 1 but fecal incontinence is generally defined as the recurrent inability to voluntarily control the passage of bowel contents through the anal canal and expel it at a socially acceptable location and time occurring in individuals over the age of four 1 2 5 8 10 Social continence has been given various precise definitions for the purposes of research however generally it refers to symptoms being controlled to an extent that is acceptable to the individual in question with no significant effect on their life There is no consensus about the best way to classify FI 8 and several methods are used Symptoms can be directly or indirectly related to the loss of bowel control The direct primary symptom is a lack of control over bowel contents which tends to worsen without treatment Indirect secondary symptoms which are the result of leakage include pruritus ani an intense itching sensation from the anus perianal dermatitis irritation and inflammation of the skin around the anus and urinary tract infections 1 Due to embarrassment people may only mention secondary symptoms rather than acknowledge incontinence Any major underlying cause will produce additional signs and symptoms such as protrusion of mucosa in external rectal prolapse Symptoms of fecal leakage FL are similar and may occur after defecation There may be loss of small amounts of brown fluid and staining of the underwear 2 Types edit FI can be divided into those people who experience a defecation urge before leakage urge incontinence and those who experience no sensation before leakage passive incontinence or soiling 8 Urge incontinence is characterized by a sudden need to defecate with little time to reach a toilet Urge and passive FI may be associated with weakness of the external anal sphincter EAS and internal anal sphincter IAS respectively Urgency may also be associated with reduced rectal volume reduced ability of the rectal walls to distend and accommodate stool and increased rectal sensitivity 5 There is a continuous spectrum of different clinical presentations from incontinence of flatus gas through incontinence of mucus or liquid stool to solids The term anal incontinence often is used to describe flatus incontinence 8 however it is also used as a synonym for FI generally It may occur together with incontinence of liquids or solids or it may present in isolation Flatus incontinence may be the first sign of FI 2 Once continence to flatus is lost it is rarely restored 8 Anal incontinence may be equally disabling as the other types 27 Fecal leakage fecal soiling and fecal seepage are minor degrees of FI and describe incontinence of liquid stool mucus or very small amounts of solid stool They cover a spectrum of increasing symptom severity staining soiling seepage and accidents 1 Rarely minor FI in adults may be described as encopresis Fecal leakage is a related topic to rectal discharge but this term does not necessarily imply any degree of incontinence Discharge generally refers to conditions where there is pus or increased mucus production or anatomical lesions that prevent the anal canal from closing fully whereas fecal leakage generally concerns disorders of IAS function and functional evacuation disorders which cause a solid fecal mass to be retained in the rectum Solid stool incontinence may be called complete or major incontinence and anything less as partial or minor incontinence i e incontinence of flatus gas liquid stool and or mucus 2 In children over the age of four who have been toilet trained a similar condition is generally termed encopresis or soiling which refers to the voluntary or involuntary loss of usually soft or semi liquid stool 28 The term pseudoincontinence is used when there is FI in children who have anatomical defects e g enlarged sigmoid colon or anal stenosis 2 Encopresis is a term that is usually applied when there are no such anatomical defects present The ICD 10 classifies nonorganic encopresis under behavioural and emotional disorders with onset usually occurring in childhood and adolescence and organic causes of encopresis along with FI 29 FI can also be classified according to gender since the cause in females may be different from males for example it may develop following radical prostatectomy in males 30 whereas females may develop FI as an immediate or delayed consequence of damage whilst giving birth Pelvic anatomy is also different according to gender with a wider pelvic outlet in females citation needed Clinical measurement edit Several severity scales exist The Cleveland Clinic Wexner fecal incontinence score takes into account five parameters that are scored on a scale from zero absent to four daily frequency of incontinence to gas liquid solid of need to wear pad and of lifestyle changes 1 The Park s incontinence score uses four categories those continent for solid and liquid stool and also for flatus those continent for solid and liquid stool but incontinent for flatus with or without urgency those continent for solid stool but incontinent for liquid stool or flatus those incontinent to formed stool complete incontinence 31 The fecal incontinence severity index is based on four types of leakage gas mucus liquid stool solid stool and five frequencies once to three times per month once per week twice per week once per day twice or more per day Other severity scales include AMS Pescatori Williams score Kirwan Miller score Saint Mark s score and the Vaizey scale 2 Differential diagnosis edit FI may present with signs similar to rectal discharge e g fistulae proctitis or rectal prolapse pseudoincontinence encopresis with no organic cause and irritable bowel syndrome 2 Management editSee also Bowel management Stool consistency Cause First line Second lineDiarrhea Inflammatory Anti inflammatory drugs Constipating drugsPseudodiarrhea Encopresis Laxatives LavageSolid Pelvic floor Biofeedback Sacral nerve stimulationSphincter intact Sacral nerve stimulation LavageSphincter rupture Anal repair Sacral nerve stimulation NeosphincterAnal atresia Lavage NeosphincterRectal prolapse Rectopexy Perineal resectionSoiling Keyhole defect Lavage PTQ implantFI is generally treatable with conservative management surgery or both 2 The success of treatment depends upon the exact causes and how easily these are corrected 8 Treatment choice depends on the cause and severity of the disease and the motivation and general health of the person affected Commonly conservative measures are used together and if appropriate surgery is carried out Treatments may be attempted until symptoms are satisfactorily controlled A treatment algorithm based upon the cause has been proposed including conservative non operative and surgical measures neosphincter refers to either dynamic graciloplasty or artificial bowel sphincter lavage refers to retrograde rectal irrigation 2 nbsp Incontinence productsConservative measures include dietary modification drug treatment retrograde anal irrigation biofeedback retraining anal sphincter exercises Incontinence products refer to devices such as anal plugs and perineal pads and garments such as diapers nappies Perineal pads are efficient and acceptable for only minor incontinence 2 If all other measures are ineffective removing the entire colon may be an option citation needed Diet edit Dietary modification may be important for successful management 5 Both diarrhea and constipation can contribute to different cases so dietary advice must be tailored to address the underlying cause or it may be ineffective or counterproductive In persons with disease aggravated by diarrhea or those with rectal loading by soft stools the following suggestions may be beneficial increase dietary fiber reduce wholegrain cereals bread reduce fruit and vegetables which contain natural laxative compounds rhubarb figs prunes plums limit beans pulses cabbage and sprouts reduce spices especially chili reduce artificial sweeteners e g sugar free chewing gum reduce alcohol especially stout beer and ale reduce lactose if there is some degree of lactase deficiency and reduce caffeine Caffeine lowers the resting tone of the anal canal and also causes diarrhea Excessive doses of vitamin C magnesium phosphorus and or calcium supplements may increase FI Reducing the olestra fat substitute which can cause diarrhea may also help 32 Medication edit Pharmacological management may include anti diarrheal constipating agents and laxatives stool bulking agents Stopping or substituting any previous medication that causes diarrhea may be helpful in some see table There is no good evidence for the use of any medications however 33 In people who have undergone gallbladder removal the bile acid sequestrant cholestyramine may help minor degrees of FI 34 Bulking agents also absorb water so may be helpful for those with diarrhea A common side effect is bloating and flatulence Topical agents to treat and prevent dermatitis may also be used such as topical antifungals when there is evidence of perianal candidiasis or occasionally mild topical anti inflammatory medication Prevention of secondary lesions is carried out by perineal cleansing moisturization and the use of a skin protectant 35 Other measures edit Evacuation aids suppositories or enemas e g glycerine or bisacodyl suppositories may be prescribed People may have a poor resting tone of the anal canal and consequently may not be able to retain an enema in which case transanal irrigation retrograde anal irrigation may be a better option as this equipment utilizes an inflatable catheter to prevent loss of the irrigation tip and to provide a water tight seal during irrigation A volume of lukewarm water is gently pumped into the colon via the anus People can be taught how to perform this treatment in their own homes but it does require special equipment If the irrigation is efficient the stool will not reach the rectum again for up to 48 hours 36 By regularly emptying the bowel using transanal irrigation controlled bowel function is often re established to a high degree in patients with bowel incontinence and or constipation This enables control over the time and place of evacuation and the development of a consistent bowel routine 36 However persistent leaking of residual irrigation fluid during the day may occur and make this option unhelpful particularly in persons with obstructed defecation syndrome who may have an incomplete evacuation of any rectal contents Consequently the best time to carry out the irrigation is typically in the evening allowing any residual liquid to be passed the next morning before leaving the home Complications such as electrolyte imbalance and perforation are rare The effect of transanal irrigation varies considerably Some individuals experience complete control of incontinence and others report little or no benefit 36 It has been suggested that if appropriate people be offered home retrograde anal irrigation 8 Biofeedback the use of equipment to record or amplify and then feed back activities of the body is a commonly used and researched treatment but the benefits are uncertain 37 Biofeedback therapy varies in the way it is delivered but it is unknown if one type has benefits over another 37 The role of pelvic floor exercises and anal sphincter exercises in FI is poorly determined While there may be some benefits they appear less useful than implanted sacral nerve stimulators These exercises aim to increase the strength of the pelvic floor muscles mainly levator ani The anal sphincters are not technically part of the pelvic floor muscle group but the EAS is a voluntary striated muscle that therefore can be strengthened in a similar manner It has not been established whether pelvic floor exercises can be distinguished from anal sphincter exercises in practice by the people doing them This kind of exercise is more commonly used to treat urinary incontinence for which there is a sound evidence base for effectiveness More rarely are they used in FI The effect of anal sphincter exercises are variously stated as an increase in the strength speed or endurance of voluntary contraction EAS 37 Electrical stimulation can also be applied to the anal sphincters and pelvic floor muscles inducing muscle contraction without traditional exercises similar to transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation TENS The evidence supporting its use is limited and any benefit is tentative 38 In light of the above intra anal electrical stimulation using an anal probe as an electrode appears to be more efficacious than intra vaginal using a vaginal probe as an electrode 38 Rarely skin reactions may occur where the electrodes are placed but these issues typically resolve when the stimulation is stopped Surgically implanted sacral nerve stimulation may be more effective than exercises and electrical stimulation and biofeedback may be more effective than exercises or electrical stimulation by themselves 37 TENS is also sometimes used to treat FI by transcutaneous tibial nerve stimulation 39 In a minority of people anal plugs may be useful for either standalone therapy or in concert with other treatments 40 Anal plugs sometimes termed tampons aim to block the involuntary loss of fecal material and they vary in design and composition 8 Polyurethane plugs were reported to perform better than those made of polyvinyl alcohol 40 Plugs are less likely to help those with frequent bowel movements 2 and many find them difficult to tolerate 40 In women a device that functions as an inflatable balloon in the vagina has been approved for use in the United States 41 Surgery edit Main article Surgical management of fecal incontinence Surgery may be carried out if conservative measures alone are not sufficient to control incontinence There are many surgical options and their relative effectiveness is debated due to a lack of good quality evidence The optimal treatment regime may be both surgical and non surgical treatments 42 The surgical options can be considered in four categories restoration and improvement of residual sphincter function sphincteroplasty sacral nerve stimulation tibial nerve stimulation correction of anorectal deformity replacement imitation of the sphincter or its function anal encirclement SECCA procedure non dynamic graciloplasty perianal injectable bulking agents dynamic sphincter replacement artificial bowel sphincter dynamic graciloplasty antegrade continence enema Malone procedure and finally fecal diversion e g colostomy 1 A surgical treatment algorithm has been proposed Isolated sphincter defects IAS EAS may be initially treated with sphincteroplasty and if this fails the person can be assessed for sacral nerve stimulation Functional deficits of the EAS and or IAS i e where there is no structural defect or only limited EAS structural defect or with neurogenic incontinence may be assessed for sacral nerve stimulation If this fails neosphincter with either dynamic graciloplasty or artificial anal sphincter may be indicated Substantial muscular and or neural defects may be treated with neosphincter initially 10 Epidemiology editFI is thought to be very common 1 but much under reported due to embarrassment One study reported a prevalence of 2 2 in the general population 2 It affects people of all ages but is more common in older adults but it should not be considered a normal part of aging 43 Females are more likely to develop it than males 63 of those with FI over 30 may be female 1 In 2014 the National Center for Health Statistics reported that one out of every six seniors in the U S who lived in their own homes or apartment had FI Men and women were equally affected 44 45 50 of people with FI have severe physical and or mental disabilities 1 People with dementia are four times more likely to have fecal incontinence compared to people of similar ages 45 46 Risk factors include age female gender urinary incontinence history of vaginal delivery non Caesarean section childbirth obesity 27 prior anorectal surgery poor general health and physical limitations Combined urinary and fecal incontinence is sometimes termed double incontinence and it is more likely to be present in those with urinary incontinence 47 Traditionally FI was thought to be an insignificant complication of surgery but it is now known that a variety of different procedures are associated with this possible complication and sometimes at high levels Examples are midline internal sphincterotomy 8 risk lateral internal sphincterotomy fistulectomy fistulotomy 18 52 hemorrhoidectomy 33 ileo anal reservoir reconstruction lower anterior resection total abdominal colectomy ureterosigmoidostomy 27 and anal dilation Lord s procedure 0 50 48 Some authors consider obstetric trauma to be the most common cause 49 History editWhile the first mention of urinary incontinence occurs in 1500 BC in the Ebers Papyrus the first mention of FI in a medical context is unknown 50 For many centuries colonic irrigation was the only treatment available Stoma creation was described in AD 1776 FI associated with rectal prolapse in AD 1873 and anterior sphincter repair in AD 1875 During the mid 20th century several operations were developed for instances where the sphincters were intact but weakened 51 Muscle transpositions using the gluteus maximus or the gracilis were devised but did not become used widely until later End to end sphincteroplasty is shown to have a high failure rate in 1940 In AD 1971 Parks and McPartlin first describe an overlapping sphincteroplasty procedure Biofeedback is first introduced in 1974 52 In 1975 Parks describes post anal repair a technique to reinforce the pelvic floor and EAS to treat idiopathic cases Endoanal ultrasound is invented in 1991 which starts to demonstrate the high number of occult sphincter tears following vaginal deliveries In 1994 the use of an endoanal coil during pelvic MRI shows greater detail of the anal canal than previously During the last 20 years dynamic graciliplasty sacral nerve stimulation injectable perianal bulking agents and radiofrequency ablation have been devised mainly due to the relatively poor success rates and high morbidity associated with the earlier procedures 51 Society and culture editPersons with this symptom are frequently ridiculed and ostracized in public It has been described as one of the most psychologically and socially debilitating conditions in an otherwise healthy individual In older people it is one of the most common reasons for admission into a care home Persons who develop FI earlier in life are less likely to marry and obtain employment Often people will go to great lengths to keep their condition secret It has been termed the silent affliction since many do not discuss the problem with their close family employers or clinicians They may be subject to gossip hostility and other forms of social exclusion 53 54 55 The economic cost has not received much attention Netherlands edit In the Netherlands a 2004 study estimated that total costs of patients with fecal incontinence were 2169 per patient per year Over half of this was productivity loss in work 56 United States edit In the US the average lifetime cost treatment and follow up was 17 166 per person in 1996 The average hospital charge for sphincteroplasty was 8555 per procedure Overall in the US the total charges associated with surgery increased from 34 million in 1998 to 57 5 million in 2003 Sacral nerve stimulation dynamic graciloplasty and colostomy were all shown to be cost effective 57 Japan edit Some insults in Japan relate to incontinence such as kusotare kusottare and shikkotare which mean shit hanger leaker oozer and piss leaker oozer respectively though these have not been in common use since the 1980s 58 Law edit The case Hiltibran et al v Levy et al in the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri resulted in that court issuing an order in 2011 That order requires incontinence briefs funded by Medicaid to be given by the State of Missouri to adults who would be institutionalized without them 59 60 61 Research editEngineered anal sphincters grown from stem cells have been successfully implanted in mice New blood vessels developed and the tissue displayed normal contraction and relaxation In the future these methods may become part of the management of FI replacing the need for high morbidity implanted devices such as the artificial bowel sphincter 62 See also editOpen defecationReferences 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of incontinence in older people with and without dementia in primary care a cohort study using The Health Improvement Network primary care database PLOS Medicine 10 8 e1001505 doi 10 1371 journal pmed 1001505 PMC 3754889 PMID 24015113 Lacima G Pera M October 2003 Combined fecal and urinary incontinence an update Current Opinion in Obstetrics amp Gynecology 15 5 405 410 doi 10 1097 00001703 200310000 00009 PMID 14501244 S2CID 20587023 Ommer A Wenger FA Rolfs T Walz MK November 2008 Continence disorders after anal surgery a relevant problem International Journal of Colorectal Disease 23 11 1023 1031 doi 10 1007 s00384 008 0524 y PMID 18629515 S2CID 7247471 Rieger N Wattchow D March 1999 The effect of vaginal delivery on anal function The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery 69 3 172 177 doi 10 1046 j 1440 1622 1999 01517 x PMID 10075354 Briel JW 2000 1 Treatment of faecal incontinence S l The Author pp 10 12 ISBN 978 90 90 13967 8 a b Abrams P et al eds 2009 Surgery for fecal incontinence PDF Incontinence 4th International Consultation on Incontinence Paris July 5 8 2008 4th ed Paris Health Publications pp 1387 1567 ISBN 978 0 9546956 8 2 Engel BT Nikoomanesh P Schuster MM March 1974 Operant conditioning of rectosphincteric responses in the treatment of fecal incontinence The New England Journal of Medicine 290 12 646 649 doi 10 1056 NEJM197403212901202 PMID 4813725 Norton NJ Barriers on Diagnosis and Treatment Impact of Fecal and Urinary Incontinence on Health Consumers Barriers on Diagnosis and Treatment A Patient Perspective International Foundation for Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders IFFGD Retrieved 1 January 2013 Ranganath S Ferzandi TR Fecal Incontinence WebMD LLC Retrieved 1 January 2013 Bliss DZ Norton C September 2010 Conservative management of fecal incontinence The American Journal of Nursing 110 9 30 8 quiz 39 40 doi 10 1097 01 NAJ 0000388262 72298 f5 PMID 20736708 S2CID 205400969 Deutekom Marije Dobben Annette C Dijkgraaf Marcel G W Terra Maaike P Stoker Jaap Bossuyt Patrick M M 2004 Costs of outpatients with fecal incontinence Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology 40 5 552 558 doi 10 1080 00365520510012172 ISSN 0036 5521 PMID 16036507 S2CID 753921 Abrams P et al eds 2009 Economics of urinary and faecal incontinence and prolapse Incontinence 4th International Consultation on Incontinence Paris July 5 8 2008 4th ed Paris Health Publications p 1685 ISBN 978 0 9546956 8 2 Wilson S 2016 09 22 W T F Japan Top 5 most offensive Japanese swear words Weird Top Five SoraNews24 Retrieved 12 May 2017 Recent Cases Olmstead Rights www olmsteadrights org govinfo www govinfo gov govinfo www govinfo gov Koch KL Bitar KN Fortunato JE December 2012 Tissue engineering for neuromuscular disorders of the gastrointestinal tract World Journal of Gastroenterology 18 47 6918 6925 doi 10 3748 wjg v18 i47 6918 PMC 3531675 PMID 23322989 Further reading editBrown HW Wexner SD Segall MM Brezoczky KL Lukacz ES November 2012 Accidental bowel leakage in the mature women s health study prevalence and predictors International Journal of Clinical Practice 66 11 1101 1108 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 1053 586 doi 10 1111 ijcp 12018 PMID 23067034 S2CID 3225854 Brown HW Wexner SD Segall MM Brezoczky KL Lukacz ES November 2012 Quality of life impact in women with accidental bowel leakage International Journal of Clinical Practice 66 11 1109 1116 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 1077 4498 doi 10 1111 ijcp 12017 PMID 23067035 S2CID 22379780 External links editIndependent continence product advisor Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fecal incontinence amp oldid 1179383008, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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