Abstract

Control of defaecation after surgical correction of high and intermediate types of congenital anorectal malformations is difficult. The posterior sagittal approach with careful reconstruction of the external sphincter is postulated to give a better outcome than the pull-through operation. The functional results of these procedures performed in one centre were evaluated in order to identify prognostic factors. Between 1979 and 1992 66 patients with high or intermediate congenital anorectal anomalies were treated in our centre. In 16 patients a pull-through operation (Kĩesewetter-Rehbein) was performed. After 1984, the posterior sagittal anorectoplasty (PSARP) (Peña and deVries) was used in 35 patients as the primary operation. In 22 patients a PSARP operation was done as a secondary procedure, in one third of these patients after a previous pull-through operation in our centre. The functional results were analysed in retrospect. Sixty operations in 53 patients could be evaluated. The overall continence rate was 34%. After the pull-through operation six out of 15 patients (40%) were continent, after a primary PSARP 10 out of 25 (40%) and after a secondary PSARP operation five out of 20 patients (25%). Patients with a sacral defect were continent only in 16% as compared to 44% of the patients with a normal sacrum. Sex was also relevant: 67% of the girls were continent, compared to 30% of the boys. Ten out of 11 girls (90%) with a normal sacrum became continent. The PSARP for high and intermediate anorectal malformations does not give better functional results than the pull-through operation. The prognosis is determined by other factors than the type of operation, notably sex and the presence or absence of sacral defects.

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