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Anorectal Motility and Sensation Abnormalities and Its Correlation with Anorectal Symptoms in Patients with Systemic Sclerosis: A Preliminary Study
Author(s) -
Hanaa S. Sallam,
Terry A. McNearney,
Jiande Z. Chen
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
isrn gastroenterology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-4401
pISSN - 2090-4398
DOI - 10.5402/2011/402583
Subject(s) - sensation , medicine , correlation , multiple sclerosis , motility , psychology , neuroscience , biology , immunology , mathematics , geometry , genetics
Gastrointestinal (GI) hypomotility and symptoms are common in Scleroderma (SSc) patients yet so far uncorrelated. Eight SSc patients and matched controls were queried about their GI dysmotility symptoms and quality of life (QoL) and underwent anorectal motility and sensory tests. Specific scoring systems were developed for anorectal symptoms and anorectal dysmotility. We found that (1) the SSc patients showed low QoL and marked overall GI symptoms. The most common anorectal symptom was incomplete bowel movement (50%). (2) Compared to normal controls, SSc patients showed impaired anorectal pressures, sensations, and rectal compliance ( P ≤ .01 for each). (3) The anorectal motility/sensation abnormality score was robustly correlated with the total anorectal symptom score ( r s = .78, P = .02). In conclusion, scleroderma patients have impaired anorectal motor and sensory functions, and the abnormality score of these anorectal functions is correlated with the total anorectal symptoms score. These scoring systems may assist clinicians in predicting dysmotility based on patient symptoms.

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