Quiz for September 11, 2023
A patient underwent a cloacal repair and prior to colostomy closure the anal opening was noted to have closed with no lumen visible on exam. A distal colostogram is shown below. How would you handle this situation?
Answer: This is a conundrum. What to do with a diverted patient with a distal anal stricture plus what appears to be another stricture in the mid neorectum. Options include: pull-through of the area just above the 2nd stricture, resection of the distal segment and pull-through of the colostomy, endoscopy via the mucous fistula and dilation of the stricture and redo anoplasty, and some others. For this case proceeding with opening at the anal level seems to be the right move. I suspect that the good lumen is readily reached. Then through this distal bowel, now open, a digital exam should palpate the narrowed area at the pelvic inlet and this is potentially dilatable as it is likely an extrinsic compression. If that is the case it is reasonable to complete the new anoplasty with no need for any incision anterior or posterior to the anoplasty, and to close the colostomy.