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Published in: Techniques in Coloproctology 9/2018

01-09-2018 | Original Article

Conservative treatment of severe defecatory urgency and fecal incontinence: minor strategies with major impact

Authors: Yolanda Ribas, Arantxa Muñoz-Duyos

Published in: Techniques in Coloproctology | Issue 9/2018

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Abstract

Background

Bowel disturbances have been identified as the most important risk factor for fecal incontinence (FI). However, few studies have evaluated the impact of fiber supplementation. Our aim was to assess the correlation between the improvement in stool consistency by fiber supplementation and the changes in urgency and number of FI episodes and in the QoL of patients with FI.

Methods

Eighty-three patients who came to our institution with FI and/or fecal urgency associated with loose stools or diarrhea were prospectively included in the study The intervention included dietary advice and methylcellulose 500 mg every 8 h for 6 weeks. All assessments were carried out at baseline and 6 weeks after the start of the intervention, and included a Bristol Stool Scale, a 3-week bowel diary, the St Mark’s score, the Fecal Incontinence Quality of Life scale (FIQL) and a bowel satisfaction score.

Results

Sixty-one patients completed the study. At baseline 50 reported episodes of urge incontinence, while 11 did not report FI episodes because they rarely left home to avoid leakage. The Bristol score improved to normal stools in 65.6% of patients after treatment. Bowel diaries showed a statistically significant reduction in the number of bowel movements, urge episodes, urge fecal incontinence episodes and soiling per week. The St Mark’s score and the bowel satisfaction score significantly improved after methylcellulose and overall deferment time also increased. FIQL significantly improved in two subdomains (lifestyle, coping/behavior). Thirty-one patients (51.7%) were discharged with methylcellulose as the only treatment.

Conclusions

FI may significantly improve with methylcellulose in selected cases. Assessment of fecal consistency and initial treatment with methylcellulose could be started at primary care level to reduce the need for specialist referral.
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Metadata
Title
Conservative treatment of severe defecatory urgency and fecal incontinence: minor strategies with major impact
Authors
Yolanda Ribas
Arantxa Muñoz-Duyos
Publication date
01-09-2018
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Techniques in Coloproctology / Issue 9/2018
Print ISSN: 1123-6337
Electronic ISSN: 1128-045X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10151-018-1855-5

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