Your rectum is the last portion of your colon. It is where stool is made before you have a bowel movement. Rectal prolapse is when portion of the rectum lumps out of the anus. Initially, a prolapse might occur only after a bowel movement. The prolapsed portion of the rectum might then gaffe back via the anal canal by itself. Over time, the prolapse might become more severe and may necessitate non-surgical treatment of prolapse rectum.
Physical examination
Physical marks of rectal prolapse embrace the following:
ü Protuberant rectal mucosa
ü Thick concentric mucosal ring
ü Sulcus noted in the middle of anal canal and rectum
ü Solitary rectal ulcer (10-25%)
ü Reduced anal sphincter tone
Rectal prolapse is a clinical diagnosis that doctors should be able to confirm in their clinic. The patient is requested to sit on a toilet and strain, after which the rectum should prolapse. If it does not prolapse with just strain, the supervision of a phosphate enema typically creates the prolapse. In a small kid, a glycerin suppository can be used as a substitute. The protuberant mass should show concentric rings of mucosa. In circumstances of small prolapse, it is occasionally challenging to differentiate between mucosal and full-thickness rectal prolapse. Mucosal prolapse normally displays radial folds rather than concentric rings. If these cannot be clinically distinguished, a defecogram might be of assistance in distinguishing these two conditions. A defecogram is needless in the presence of a noticeable rectal prolapse.
Physical examination
Physical marks of rectal prolapse embrace the following:
ü Protuberant rectal mucosa
ü Thick concentric mucosal ring
ü Sulcus noted in the middle of anal canal and rectum
ü Solitary rectal ulcer (10-25%)
ü Reduced anal sphincter tone
Rectal prolapse is a clinical diagnosis that doctors should be able to confirm in their clinic. The patient is requested to sit on a toilet and strain, after which the rectum should prolapse. If it does not prolapse with just strain, the supervision of a phosphate enema typically creates the prolapse. In a small kid, a glycerin suppository can be used as a substitute. The protuberant mass should show concentric rings of mucosa. In circumstances of small prolapse, it is occasionally challenging to differentiate between mucosal and full-thickness rectal prolapse. Mucosal prolapse normally displays radial folds rather than concentric rings. If these cannot be clinically distinguished, a defecogram might be of assistance in distinguishing these two conditions. A defecogram is needless in the presence of a noticeable rectal prolapse.