J Korean Soc Coloproctol.  2007 Aug;23(4):232-236.

Effect of Electrical Stimulation and Biofeedback Therapy for Constipated Patients with Impaired Rectal Sensation

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Surgery, Seoul Adventist Hospital, Seoul, Korea. hwangyon@hotmail.com

Abstract

PURPOSE: Biofeedback therapy is widely used for the management of constipation associated with pelvic outlet obstruction. Some patients have shown poor outcome after biofeedback alone. A subgroup of patients complains of absence of desire to defecate. The main pathophysiology of constipation may be impaired rectal sensation or compliance. This study evaluated the effect of electrical stimulation and biofeedback therapy (EST-BF) for this subgroup of constipated patients with impaired rectal sensation.
METHODS
Of the 37 patients diagnosed with pelvic outlet obstruction by using cinedefecography, 9 patients (M:F=2:7, age=22~77 years, median=57 years) who had impaired rectal sensation (rectal desire threshold > or =100 ml) on anorectal manometry were selected. These patients were treated with EST-BF therapy 2~6 (median: 5) sessions, Kontinece, Multichannel system, HMT, Inc, Seoul, Korea). Treatment consisted of 20 minutes of variant-mode electrical stimulation and 20 minutes of EMG biofeedback therapy per week administered by a specialized colorectal surgeon. All patients were evaluated by using a standardized questionnaire and a threshold for rectal sensation based on balloon distention before and after treatment.
RESULTS
At post EST-BF, six (67%) patients had experienced an improvement in symptoms, including five (56%) patients with complete symptom relief. Significant improvement in rectal sensation, especially the rectal defecation desire threshold (pre-EST-BF vs. post- EST-BF: 181.0+/-38.7 vs. 88.3+/-29.1) was achieved.
CONCLUSIONS
EST- BF may be an effective option for use in the treatment of functional constipation with impaired rectal sensation.

Keyword

Functional constipation; Impaired rectal sensation; Biofeedback therapy; Electrical stimuation therapy

MeSH Terms

Biofeedback, Psychology*
Compliance
Constipation
Defecation
Electric Stimulation*
Humans
Manometry
Surveys and Questionnaires
Sensation*
Seoul
Full Text Links
  • JKSC
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr