Lateral Subcutaneous Internal Sphincterotomy in the Treatment of Chronic Anal Fissure: Our Experience in 246 Patients

Authors

  • Nikolaos Liratzopoulos 1st Department of Surgery, University General Hospital, Alexandroupolis, Greece
  • Eleni I. Efremidou 1st Department of Surgery, University General Hospital, Alexandroupolis, Greece
  • Michael S. Papageorgiou 1st Department of Surgery, University General Hospital, Alexandroupolis, Greece
  • George Kouklakis 1st Department of Surgery, University General Hospital, Alexandroupolis, Greece
  • John Moschos 1st Department of Surgery, University General Hospital, Alexandroupolis, Greece
  • Konstantinos J. Manolas 1st Department of Surgery, University General Hospital, Alexandroupolis, Greece
  • George J. Minopoulos 1st Department of Surgery, University General Hospital, Alexandroupolis, Greece

Keywords:

Anal fissure, surgical techniques, lateral subcutaneous internal sphincterotomy

Abstract

Background. Chronic anal fissure is the most common cause of anal pain associated with internal anal sphincter hypertonia. Reduction of hypertonia favours fissure healing. Temporary reduction in sphincter tone can be achieved by conservative treatment. Surgical sphincterotomy achieves permanent reduction of sphincter hypertonia and is very successful at healing anal fissures, but requires an operation with associated small morbidity.

Methods. A study was undertaken on 246 patients (120 men, 126 women, mean age 48.3 years), undergoing subcutaneous lateral internal sphincterotomy for a chronic fissure-in-ano from January 1,1981 to December 31, 2004. Therapeutical outcome, postoperative course and early and long-term results were recorded.

Results. During the study period, the 246 patients underwent total subcutaneous lateral internal sphincterotomy, 62 of them under general anesthesia (1981-1991), and the remainder under local anesthesia. Two-hundred-forty-two patients returned for their postoperative visits at 2, 6, 24 and 48 weeks, while four patients were lost to follow-up. At 3 months postoperatively, 97.5% of fissures had healed; 224 fissures were healed by 6 weeks, 10 by 7 weeks and 2 by 3 months. Pain was significantly reduced in all patients at Day 1 postoperative. Minor complications included hematoma (0.8%) and pain (0.4%). New minor incontinence was seen in 7.02% of patients at 48-week follow up. Patients' satisfaction was 91.7%.

Conclusions. Total subcutaneous internal sphincterotomy is a safe and effective treatment for chronic anal fissures, that only rarely impairs continence to flatus.

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Published

2006-06-01

How to Cite

1.
Liratzopoulos N, Efremidou EI, Papageorgiou MS, Kouklakis G, Moschos J, Manolas KJ, Minopoulos GJ. Lateral Subcutaneous Internal Sphincterotomy in the Treatment of Chronic Anal Fissure: Our Experience in 246 Patients. JGLD [Internet]. 2006 Jun. 1 [cited 2026 Jun. 10];15(2):143-7. Available from: https://jgld.ro/jgld/index.php/jgld/article/view/2006.2.6

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Original Article