Management of patients with faecal incontinence

Faecal incontinence, defined as the involuntary loss of solid or liquid stool, is a common problem affecting 0.8–8.3% of the adult population. Individuals suffering from faecal incontinence often live a restricted life with reduced quality of life. The present paper is a clinically oriented review o...

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Main Authors: Jakob Duelund-Jakobsen, Jonas Worsoe, Lilli Lundby, Peter Christensen, Klaus Krogh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2016-01-01
Series:Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1756283X15614516
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spelling doaj-b36b919360ed443ea6c6c2eaef327b4b2020-11-25T02:58:17ZengSAGE PublishingTherapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology1756-283X1756-28482016-01-01910.1177/1756283X15614516Management of patients with faecal incontinenceJakob Duelund-JakobsenJonas WorsoeLilli LundbyPeter ChristensenKlaus KroghFaecal incontinence, defined as the involuntary loss of solid or liquid stool, is a common problem affecting 0.8–8.3% of the adult population. Individuals suffering from faecal incontinence often live a restricted life with reduced quality of life. The present paper is a clinically oriented review of the pathophysiology, evaluation and treatment of faecal incontinence. First-line therapy should be conservative and usually include dietary adjustments, fibre supplement, constipating agents or mini enemas. Biofeedback therapy to improve external anal sphincter function can be offered but the evidence for long-term effect is poor. There is good evidence that colonic irrigation can reduce symptoms and improve quality of life, especially in patients with neurogenic faecal incontinence. Surgical interventions should only be considered if conservative measures fail. Sacral nerve stimulation is a minimally invasive procedure with high rate of success. Advanced surgical procedures should be restricted to highly selected patients and only performed at specialist centres. A stoma should be considered if other treatment modalities fail.https://doi.org/10.1177/1756283X15614516
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jakob Duelund-Jakobsen
Jonas Worsoe
Lilli Lundby
Peter Christensen
Klaus Krogh
spellingShingle Jakob Duelund-Jakobsen
Jonas Worsoe
Lilli Lundby
Peter Christensen
Klaus Krogh
Management of patients with faecal incontinence
Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology
author_facet Jakob Duelund-Jakobsen
Jonas Worsoe
Lilli Lundby
Peter Christensen
Klaus Krogh
author_sort Jakob Duelund-Jakobsen
title Management of patients with faecal incontinence
title_short Management of patients with faecal incontinence
title_full Management of patients with faecal incontinence
title_fullStr Management of patients with faecal incontinence
title_full_unstemmed Management of patients with faecal incontinence
title_sort management of patients with faecal incontinence
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology
issn 1756-283X
1756-2848
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Faecal incontinence, defined as the involuntary loss of solid or liquid stool, is a common problem affecting 0.8–8.3% of the adult population. Individuals suffering from faecal incontinence often live a restricted life with reduced quality of life. The present paper is a clinically oriented review of the pathophysiology, evaluation and treatment of faecal incontinence. First-line therapy should be conservative and usually include dietary adjustments, fibre supplement, constipating agents or mini enemas. Biofeedback therapy to improve external anal sphincter function can be offered but the evidence for long-term effect is poor. There is good evidence that colonic irrigation can reduce symptoms and improve quality of life, especially in patients with neurogenic faecal incontinence. Surgical interventions should only be considered if conservative measures fail. Sacral nerve stimulation is a minimally invasive procedure with high rate of success. Advanced surgical procedures should be restricted to highly selected patients and only performed at specialist centres. A stoma should be considered if other treatment modalities fail.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1756283X15614516
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