Coggrave Maureen, Norton Christine
The National Spinal Injuries Centre, Stoke Mandeville Hospital, Mandeville Road, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, UK, HP21 8AL.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Dec 18(12):CD002115. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD002115.pub4.
People with central neurological disease or injury have a much higher risk of both faecal incontinence and constipation than the general population. There is often a fine line between the two symptoms, with any management intended to ameliorate one risking precipitating the other. Bowel problems are observed to be the cause of much anxiety and may reduce quality of life in these people. Current bowel management is largely empirical, with a limited research base. This is an update of a Cochrane review first published in 2001 and subsequently updated in 2003 and 2006. The review is relevant to individuals with any disease directly and chronically affecting the central nervous system (post-traumatic, degenerative, ischaemic or neoplastic), such as multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, cerebrovascular disease, Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease.
To determine the effects of management strategies for faecal incontinence and constipation in people with a neurological disease or injury affecting the central nervous system.
We searched the Cochrane Incontinence Group Trials Register (searched 8 June 2012), which includes searches of the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE and MEDLINE In-Process as well as handsearching of journals and conference proceedings; and all reference lists of relevant articles.
Randomised and quasi-randomised trials evaluating any type of conservative or surgical intervention for the management of faecal incontinence and constipation in people with central neurological disease or injury were selected. Specific therapies for the treatment of neurological diseases that indirectly affect bowel dysfunction were also considered.
Two review authors independently assessed the risk of bias of eligible trials and independently extracted data from the included trials using a range of pre-specified outcome measures.
Twenty trials involving 902 people were included.Oral medicationsThere was evidence from individual small trials that people with Parkinson's disease had a statistically significant improvement in the number of bowel motions or successful bowel care routines per week when fibre (psyllium) (mean difference (MD) -2.2 bowel motions, 95% confidence interval (CI) -3.3 to -1.4) or oral laxative (isosmotic macrogol electrolyte solution) (MD 2.9 bowel motions per week, 95% CI 1.48 to 4.32) are used compared with placebo. One trial in people with spinal cord injury showed statistically significant improvement in total bowel care time comparing intramuscular neostigmine-glycopyrrolate (anticholinesterase plus an anticholinergic drug) with placebo (MD 23.3 minutes, 95% CI 4.68 to 41.92).Five studies reported the use of cisapride and tegaserod in people with spinal cord injuries or Parkinson's disease. These drugs have since been withdrawn from the market due to adverse effects; as they are no longer available they have been removed from this review.Rectal stimulantsOne small trial in people with spinal cord injuries compared two bisacodyl suppositories, one polyethylene glycol-based (PGB) and one hydrogenated vegetable oil-based (HVB). The trial found that the PGB bisacodyl suppository significantly reduced the mean defaecation period (PGB 20 minutes versus HVB 36 minutes, P < 0.03) and mean total time for bowel care (PGB 43 minutes versus HVB 74.5 minutes, P < 0.01) compared with the HVB bisacodyl suppository.Physical interventionsThere was evidence from one small trial with 31 participants that abdominal massage statistically improved the number of bowel motions in people who had a stroke compared with no massage (MD 1.7 bowel motions per week, 95% CI 2.22 to 1.18). A small feasibility trial including 30 individuals with multiple sclerosis also found evidence to support the use of abdominal massage. Constipation scores were statistically better with the abdominal massage during treatment although this was not supported by a change in outcome measures (for example the neurogenic bowel dysfunction score).One small trial in people with spinal cord injury showed statistically significant improvement in total bowel care time using electrical stimulation of abdominal muscles compared with no electrical stimulation (MD 29.3 minutes, 95% CI 7.35 to 51.25).There was evidence from one trial with a low risk of bias that for people with spinal cord injury transanal irrigation, compared against conservative bowel care, statistically improved constipation scores, neurogenic bowel dysfunction score, faecal incontinence score and total time for bowel care (MD 27.4 minutes, 95% CI 7.96 to 46.84). Patients were also more satisfied with this method.Other interventionsIn one trial in stroke patients, there appeared to be a short term benefit (less than six months) to patients in terms of the number of bowel motions per week with a one-off educational intervention from nurses (a structured nurse assessment leading to targeted education versus routine care), but this did not persist at 12 months. A trial in individuals with spinal cord injury found that a stepwise protocol did not reduce the need for oral laxatives and manual evacuation of stool.Finally, one further trial reported in abstract form showed that oral carbonated water (rather than tap water) improved constipation scores in people who had had a stroke.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is still remarkably little research on this common and, to patients, very significant issue of bowel management. The available evidence is almost uniformly of low methodological quality. The clinical significance of some of the research findings presented here is difficult to interpret, not least because each intervention has only been addressed in individual trials, against control rather than compared against each other, and the interventions are very different from each other.There was very limited evidence from individual trials in favour of a bulk-forming laxative (psyllium), an isosmotic macrogol laxative, abdominal massage, electrical stimulation and an anticholinesterase-anticholinergic drug combination (neostigmine-glycopyrrolate) compared to no treatment or controls. There was also evidence in favour of transanal irrigation (compared to conservative management), oral carbonated (rather than tap) water and abdominal massage with lifestyle advice (compared to lifestyle advice alone). However, these findings need to be confirmed by larger well-designed controlled trials which should include evaluation of the acceptability of the intervention to patients and the effect on their quality of life.
患有中枢神经系统疾病或损伤的人群出现大便失禁和便秘的风险比普通人群高得多。这两种症状之间往往界限很细微,任何旨在改善其中一种症状的治疗方法都可能引发另一种症状。肠道问题被认为是导致这些人焦虑的重要原因,并且可能降低他们的生活质量。目前的肠道管理方法大多基于经验,相关研究基础有限。这是对一篇Cochrane系统评价的更新,该评价首次发表于2001年,随后在2003年和2006年进行了更新。本评价适用于患有任何直接且慢性影响中枢神经系统的疾病(创伤后、退行性、缺血性或肿瘤性)的个体,如多发性硬化症、脊髓损伤、脑血管疾病、帕金森病和阿尔茨海默病。
确定针对影响中枢神经系统的神经疾病或损伤患者的大便失禁和便秘管理策略的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane尿失禁小组试验注册库(检索于2012年6月8日),其中包括对Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE及MEDLINE在研数据库的检索,以及对期刊和会议论文集的手工检索;并检索了所有相关文章的参考文献列表。
纳入评估针对中枢神经系统疾病或损伤患者的大便失禁和便秘管理的任何类型保守或手术干预的随机和半随机试验。还考虑了用于治疗间接影响肠道功能障碍的神经疾病的特定疗法。
两位综述作者独立评估纳入试验的偏倚风险,并使用一系列预先设定的结局指标从纳入试验中独立提取数据。
纳入了20项涉及902人的试验。
个别小型试验的证据表明,与安慰剂相比,帕金森病患者使用纤维(车前草)(平均差值(MD)-2.2次排便,95%置信区间(CI)-3.3至-1.4)或口服泻药(等渗聚乙二醇电解质溶液)(MD每周2.9次排便,95%CI 1.48至4.32)时,每周排便次数或成功的肠道护理常规有统计学显著改善。一项针对脊髓损伤患者的试验表明,与安慰剂相比,肌肉注射新斯的明-格隆溴铵(抗胆碱酯酶加抗胆碱能药物)时,总肠道护理时间有统计学显著改善(MD 23.3分钟,95%CI 4.68至41.92)。
五项研究报告了在脊髓损伤或帕金森病患者中使用西沙必利和替加色罗的情况。由于不良反应,这些药物已从市场上撤出;由于不再可用,它们已从本综述中删除。
一项针对脊髓损伤患者的小型试验比较了两种比沙可啶栓剂,一种基于聚乙二醇(PGB),一种基于氢化植物油(HVB)。该试验发现,与HVB比沙可啶栓剂相比,PGB比沙可啶栓剂显著缩短了平均排便时间(PGB为20分钟,HVB为36分钟,P<0.03)和肠道护理总时间(PGB为43分钟,HVB为74.5分钟,P<0.01)。
一项有31名参与者的小型试验的证据表明,与不进行按摩相比,腹部按摩在中风患者中能显著改善排便次数(MD每周1.7次排便,95%CI 2.22至1.18)。一项纳入30名多发性硬化症患者的小型可行性试验也发现了支持使用腹部按摩的证据。治疗期间腹部按摩的便秘评分在统计学上更好,尽管结局指标(如神经源性肠道功能障碍评分)没有变化。
一项针对脊髓损伤患者的小型试验表明,与不进行电刺激相比,使用腹部肌肉电刺激时总肠道护理时间有统计学显著改善(MD 29.3分钟,95%CI 7.35至51.25)。
一项偏倚风险较低的试验的证据表明,对于脊髓损伤患者,与保守的肠道护理相比,经肛门灌洗在统计学上改善了便秘评分、神经源性肠道功能障碍评分、大便失禁评分和肠道护理总时间(MD 2 — 7.4分钟,95%CI 7.96至46.84)。患者对这种方法也更满意。
在一项中风患者试验中,护士的一次性教育干预(结构化护士评估导致针对性教育与常规护理相比)在每周排便次数方面似乎对患者有短期益处(不到六个月),但在12个月时这种益处不再持续。一项针对脊髓损伤患者的试验发现,逐步方案并不能减少口服泻药和手动排便的需求。
最后,另一项以摘要形式报告的试验表明,口服碳酸水(而非自来水)可改善中风患者的便秘评分。
对于这个常见且对患者非常重要的肠道管理问题,研究仍然非常少。现有证据几乎都具有较低的方法学质量。这里呈现的一些研究结果的临床意义难以解释,尤其是因为每种干预仅在个别试验中与对照进行比较,而不是相互比较,并且这些干预彼此差异很大。
与未治疗或对照相比,个别试验中有非常有限的证据支持使用容积性泻药(车前草)、等渗聚乙二醇泻药、腹部按摩、电刺激和抗胆碱酯酶-抗胆碱能药物组合(新斯的明-格隆溴铵)。也有证据支持经肛门灌洗(与保守管理相比)、口服碳酸(而非自来水)水以及腹部按摩并给予生活方式建议(与仅给予生活方式建议相比)。然而,这些发现需要通过更大规模、设计良好的对照试验来证实,这些试验应包括评估干预措施对患者的可接受性及其对生活质量的影响。