Internal Medicine

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0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:18


Peripheral Neuropathies Perirectal Abscesses and Fistulas 1157

■Local treatment to minimize pressure damage for entrapment
neuropathy; surgical decompression sometimes needed
follow-up
■Depends on individual disorder

complications and prognosis
■Depend on individual disorder

PERIRECTAL ABSCESSES AND FISTULAS


MARK A. VIERRA, MD


history & physical
Abscess
■Rectal pain most common presenting symptom.
■Pain tends to be of relatively short duration (hours or days), pro-
gressive, and present continuously, rather than pain only with bowel
movements, as occurs with a fissure
■Tenderness, swelling, induration, fluctulence usually, but not always
present
■Complicated abscesses may require examination under anesthesia
for diagnosis
■Fever and leukocytosis unreliably present

Fistula
■Following drainage 25%–50% of abscesses will go on to persist as a
fistula
■Not usually painful, though may develop recurrent abscesses at the
site
■Small external opening with mucoid or prurulent drainage is usually
easily visible
tests
Laboratory Tests
■Anorectal abscesses or fistulas complicated by abscess may be
accompanied by leukocytosis, though this is variable
■CT scan or endorectal ultrasound may very rarely be necessary to
delineate abscess or fistula
■Barium enema or fistulogram may be necessary to delineate complex
fistulas
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