Peri-anal abscess
Usually painful in anal region
Swinging pyrexia
Treatment is drainage with appropriate antibiotics
Classification of Perianal abscess
- Peri-anal 60%- suppuration of anal gland (can also occur as result of thrombosed external pile)
- Ischio-rectal 30% (IR fossa communicates with opposite side via the post-sphincteric space; involvement of contralateral fossa not uncommon)
- Sub-mucous 5%; usually resolves (result of injection of haemarrhoids)
- Pelvi-rectal 5% (supralevator) - usually secondary to appendicitis, salpingitis, diverticulitis, parametritis
Procedure
- Cruciate incision over abscess + excise skin over abscess (de-roof)
- (Take microbiological cultures - if enteroccocci, high incidence of fistula; up to 40% risk)
- As soon as infection subsided, wound explored under anaesthesia + careful search for fistulous opening
- If no fistula found, cavity should be lightly packed with gauze + apply T-bandage
Fistula in Ano
Track lined by granulation tissue that connects deeply in anal canal/rectum and superficially on the skin around the anus
Usually results from an anorectal abscess which bursts spontaneously
Associated with underlying diseases - eg TB, Crohns
Gives recurrent discharge
Goodsall's rule: fistulae with external opening anterior to anus have a direct (straight) opening. Fistulae with posterior opening have curved tracks.
Classification of Perianal fistula
- Simple or complex - associated or not with abscess cavity
- High or Low - above or below anorectal (puborectalis) ring
- Subcutaneous
- Submucous
- Low anal
- High anal
- Pelvirectal
- Park's Classification - by origin of fistula track
- Intersphincteric (between internal/external sphincters) 70%
- Transphincteric (across external sphincters) 25%
- Suprasphincteric (over sphincters)
- Extrasphincteric (above and through levator ani)
Procedure
- Decide whether fistula is low or high
- Proctoscopy - reveals internal opening
- Endoluminal ultrasonography / MRI to map complex fistulae (may have multiple openings)
- Low: Lay open
- Prep cleaning enema
- Lithotomy position
- Identify the fistula: protoscopy + retrograde probe + dilute methylene blue dye
- Track opened along director and bleeding controlled
- Trim edges of track
- High: (risk of incontinence if laid open) - staged procedure + protective diverting colostomy to prevent septic complications and to shorten healing time between procedures
- Treat the cause: TB, Crohns
- Insertion of a seton
- (a heavy ligature of silk, nylon, silastic or linen) used when internal opening near anorectal ring
- acts as wick/drain to allow acute inflammatory reaction around track to subside
- Can be serially tightened to cut through sphincter (allows healing) to maintain sphincter integrity
- Acts to drain fistula
- + Covering colostomy
- Low: Lay open
[Levator ani = Pubo-rectalis + Pubo-coccygeus + Ilio-coccygeus]
Fissure in Ano
- Longitudinal tear in anal canal (90% posterior midline)
- ?Constipation / large stools primary cause or result of them
- Combination of local trauma to epithelium + ischaemia preventing adequate healing
- Also seen in STDs and IBD
- Symptoms: pain, bleeding, itching, pruritis ani
Treatment
- Conservative
- High fibre diet, stool bulking
- Topical LA
- Topical GTN (controls anal spasm)
- Surgical
- Lateral sphincterotomy: divide distal internal sphincter to dentate line with incision lateral and away from fissure (complications - transient flatus incontinence)