AI Article Synopsis

  • Anorectal sepsis often starts with anal abscesses that can lead to fistulas, commonly arising from cryptoglandular issues or inflammatory bowel diseases.
  • A 32-year-old male experienced severe anal pain after undergoing leech therapy for hemorrhoidal swelling, resulting in an abscess that was successfully drained at a Proctology Unit.
  • Post-treatment, the patient healed well and remained symptom-free for six months, highlighting the need to critically evaluate modern medical practices that permit non-scientific treatments like leech therapy without proven efficacy.

Article Abstract

Anorectal sepsis usually presents with anal abscesses, which may evolve to become anorectal fistulas. Most of these cases are either of cryptoglandular origin, or they develop secondary to inflammatory bowel diseases. A 32-year-old male patient applied to our Proctology Unit with severe anal pain and swelling. Three days before admission, leeches were applied to the hemorrhoidal swellings in a medical center. The abscess was drained with appropriate unroofing and search for any compartments. The patient recovered rapidly. The abscess culture and microscopy revealed mix flora with predominant . After 6 months, he has been symptom-free with perfect healing of the surgical site. We need to check up on possible handicaps in our modern patient care policies that divert people to such methods. Nevertheless, such alternative methods should be regarded as nonscientific and out of context unless their efficacy and safety are documented.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6667984PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jscr/rjz218DOI Listing

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