The prevalence of co-occurring PFDs was high and was doubled in women after VD compared with CS. Women with UI most likely had it as an isolated symptom, whereas FI and sPOP more often occurred in combination.
Sixty-seven patients with a J-shaped ileonanal pouch were studied over a 2-year period with regular recording of sphincter and pouch characteristics and analysis of their role in functional outcome. Although there was a 27 per cent permanent reduction in resting anal pressure (RAP) (P less than 0.001), two-thirds of the patients still had a RAP within the normal range. The mean(s.d.) pouch volume increased during the first year from 132(46) ml to 282(85) ml. RAP was not related to functional outcome and preoperative RAP was not predictive of subsequent function. Large pouch volume and compliance correlated with low defaecation frequency (range of r = 0.27-0.36; P less than 0.05) and good overall function (r = 0.37-0.56; P less than 0.01). The initial pouch volume was predictive of subsequent overall function. The ileal length used for pouch construction predicted subsequent pouch volume (r = 0.48; P less than 0.001) and to some extent functional outcome (r = 0.28-0.37; P less than 0.05). However, the studied variables accounted for only 21 per cent of the total variance of functional outcome.
The effects of age, gender, and parity on rectoanal function were examined in a cross-sectional population study, including 68 normal subjects (32 men and 36 women) aged 23 to 91 years. Rectal volumetry was evaluated with graded isobaric rectal distension with 5-60 cm H2O in combination with anal manometry. Data were analysed by use of the multiple regression technique. Increasing age correlated with a decrease in rectal volume (r = -0.285, p less than 0.05), resting anal pressure (r = -0.625, p less than 0.001), and maximal squeezing pressure (r = -0.557, p less than 0.001). The decrease in maximal squeeze pressure with age was similar in men and women (approximately = 1% x year-1), although the median of maximal squeeze pressure in women was 58.3-75.7% of that in men (p less than 0.001). Nor was there a difference in resting anal pressure between men and women. An age-dependent increase was observed for the pressure threshold to produce an initial sensation of rectal filling and the rectoanal inhibition reflex (r = 0.446, p less than 0.001). The sensory threshold increased with age, but this was more pronounced in women. No effect of parity on rectoanal function could be demonstrated. However, this would best be investigated in a longitudinal population study. We believe that identification of causes for interindividual variation and regression analysis procedures will increase the discriminative accuracy of analysis of rectoanal function. The present study shows that several of the demonstrated age-related changes have a tendency to expose elderly subjects, particularly women, to the problems of incontinence.
BACKGROUND: The long-term effects of 1 or 2 consecutive obstetrical anal sphincter injuries on bowel continence are still inadequately investigated, and published results remain contradictory. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to present detailed descriptive measures of the current bowel incontinence 20 years after the first birth in women who had 2 vaginal deliveries with and without sphincter injuries. STUDY DESIGN: Birth register data were used prospectively and linked to information from a questionnaire survey about current symptoms. Women with 2 singleton vaginal births, from 1992 to 1998, and no further births were retrieved and surveyed by the Swedish Medical Birth Register and Statistics Sweden in 2015. A simple random sample of 11,000 women was drawn from a source cohort of 64,687 women. The cumulative effect was studied in all women with a repeat sphincter injury from 1987 to 2000. Postal and web-based questionnaires were used. The study population consisted of 6760 women with no sphincter injury, 357 with 1 sphincter injury, and 324 women with 2 sphincter injuries. Women with 2 deliveries without sphincter injuries aged 40 to 60 years as reference, were compared with those of women that sustained 1 or 2 consecutive sphincter injuries. Here, third-and fourth-degree perineal tears were presented as 1 group. Fecal incontinence was defined as current involuntary leakage of solid or liquid stool, with and without concomitant leakage of gas. The Fisher exact test and the Mann-Whitney U test were used to compare the results of the 2 groups. The trend was analyzed using the Mantel-Haenszel statistics. Logistic regression models obtained the estimated age-related probability of fecal incontinence components. RESULTS: The risk of sphincter injury at first delivery was 3.9%, and the risk of a repeat sphincter injury was 10.0% (odds ratio, 2.70; 95% confidence interval, 1.80e4.07). The overall prevalence of fecal incontinence in women without sphincter injuries was 11.7%, which doubled to 23.8% (odds ratio, 2.27; 95% confidence interval, 1.75e2.94) in those with 1 sphincter injury and more than tripled to 36.1% (odds ratio, 3.97; 95% confidence interval, 3.11e5.07) after 2 sphincter injuries (trend P<.0001). The proportion of women with severe fecal incontinence increased 3-fold and 5-fold from 1.8% after no obstetrical anal sphincter injury to 5.4% (95% confidence interval, 3.3e8.2) and 9.0% (95% confidence interval, 6.1e12.6) after 1 or 2 obstetrical anal sphincter injuries, respectively (trend P<.0001). In women without sphincter injuries, the estimated probability of fecal incontinence increased from 7.0% at the age of 40 years to 19.8% at the age of 60 years. In contrast, in women with 1 or 2 sphincter injuries, the estimated probability of fecal incontinence increased from 26.1% and 33.3%, respectively, at the age of 40 years to 36.8% and 48.8% at the age of 60 years. The prevalence of fecal incontinence increased after 52 years of age in women with 1 or 2 sphincter injuries. The dominant types of leakage in women...
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