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Surgical repair of an obstetric cloaca with review of the literature. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A complete perineal wound breakdown after a fourth degree laceration can lead to severe complications like obstetric cloaca, which is uncommon but serious.
  • A 32-year-old woman experienced this complication 4 months after childbirth and chose to undergo surgical repair after thorough counseling.
  • The repair involved detailed steps including separating rectovaginal tissue, reconstructing the perineal body and sphincter, and integrating levator muscles, resulting in successful healing and minimal long-term complications.

Article Abstract

A complete perineal wound breakdown of a fourth degree laceration leading to a cloaca is a rare but devastating complication of vaginal childbirth. A 32-year-old primiparous woman presented with an obstetric cloaca 4 months following delivery. She underwent preoperative evaluation and, following extensive counselling, elected to proceed with operative repair. The procedure is presented in 15 well-defined steps with photos. The repair was performed in standard fashion with three supplementary steps. These included: (1) division of the rectovaginal tissue into three distinct layers; (2) attachment of these layers individually to the reconstructed perineal body and sphincter and (3) incorporation of the levator muscles into the repair. The wound healed well within 6 weeks of repair. Now 3½ years postoperatively, the patient has no faecal incontinence or sexual dysfunction and only minimal defecatory dysfunction. The discussion describes our surgical approach in the context of a review of the literature.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7839897PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bcr-2020-234321DOI Listing

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