PHYSIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE ANAL SPHINCTERS AND P

PHYSIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE ANAL SPHINCTERS AND PEL VIC FLOOR

70 60 O) 2 50 40 30 20 Pressure (cmH 10 0 7 6543 210 Distance from anal verge (cm) Figure 80.5 A typical normal ‘pull-through’ manometric study of the anal canal (3.5 cm long; maximal resting anal canal pressure approx imately 60 cmH O). 2 Rectal balloon Rectal balloon in /f_l ated de /f_l ated 140 120 O) 2 100 80 60 40 Anal pressure (cmH 20 0 1 min Time Figure 80.6 Anal manometry tracing demonstrating a normal rectoanal inhibitory re /f_l ex when the rectal balloon is in /f_l ated with 50 mL of air.

(b) Figure 80.7 (a) Axial view of endoanal ultrasonography through the mid-anal canal of a female patient. Normal intact /f_i bres of the internal (thin arrow) and external (thick arrow) anal sphincter complex. (b) Cor

onal T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging through the anal canal of a male patient showing the three distinct zones of the low-signal external anal sphincter complex (arrows) (courtesy of Dr Alison Corr, Consultant Radiologist, St Mark’s Hospital, London, UK).

radio-opaque vaginal tampon that will allow anatomical changes during defecation (e.g. rectocele, enterocele) to be identified. Dynamic magnetic resonance (MR) proctography provides more details of other pelvic organs; however, evacu ation in the supine position may be less physiological than the sitting position that can be achieved within an open magnet ( Figure 80.8 ). Interobserver agreement for MR proctography is better than for barium defecograph y; however, imaging must be interpreted in the context of the patient’s symptoms and used to guide rational rather than empirical treatment strate gies.

Figure 80.8 Visualisation of the rectum is achieved with barium-impregnated ‘synthetic stool’ using conventional defecating proctography (a) /uni00A0 or magnetic resonance proctography (b) . A large rectocele is apparent.


Revision #1
Created 2025-12-31 15:29:19 UTC by Omar Ayman
Updated 2025-12-31 15:29:19 UTC by Omar Ayman