Ripstein procedure is an effective treatment for rectal prolapse without constipation
- PMID: 8482171
- DOI: 10.1007/BF02050018
Ripstein procedure is an effective treatment for rectal prolapse without constipation
Abstract
The operation of choice for complete rectal prolapse is controversial. We reviewed 169 patients undergoing 185 surgical procedures for rectal prolapse over a 27-year period. The most common surgical procedure employed was the Ripstein procedure (n = 142) and is the focus of this report. Other surgical procedures used included resection rectopexy (n = 18), anterior resection (n = 7), Altemeier's (n = 9), Delorme's (n = 2), and anal encirclement (n = 7). The median age was 59 years (range, 12-94 years), and the female-to-male ratio was 5:1. The incidence of fecal incontinence, solitary rectal ulcer syndrome, and prior surgery elsewhere for rectal prolapse was 40 percent, 12 percent, and 19 percent, respectively. Operative mortality was 0.6 percent; morbidity was 16 percent. Median follow-up was 4.2 years (range, 1-15 years). Complete recurrence of prolapse after the Ripstein procedure was 8 percent; one-third of these patients recurred 3 to 14 years after surgery. Fecal incontinence improved after the Ripstein procedure or resection rectopexy in about half the patients. Persistence of prior constipation was more common after the Ripstein procedure than after resection rectopexy (57 percent vs. 17 percent; P = 0.03, chi-squared). Fifteen patients developed constipation for the first time after the Ripstein procedure. About one in three patients, irrespective of surgical procedures, remained dissatisfied with the final outcome despite anatomic correction of the prolapse. The Ripstein procedure has proven to be a safe procedure with good anatomic repair of the prolapse and may improve continence. In the presence of constipation, procedures other than the Ripstein procedure may be preferable.
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