Manookian C M, Sokol T P, Headrick C, Fleshner P R
Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Dis Colon Rectum. 1998 Dec;41(12):1529-33. doi: 10.1007/BF02237301.
Although anorectal disease is common in human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients, little is known about the type and anatomic distribution of anal fistulas in this patient group. The aim of this study was to compare anatomic characteristics of anal fistulas in human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients with those in human immunodeficiency virus-negative patients by use of a retrospective chart review.
The charts of 146 male patients younger than 50 years with an anal fistula were reviewed. Incomplete fistulas referred to those tracts arising from an internal opening into either a blind sinus or an undrained abscess cavity.
There were 60 human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients and 86 human immunodeficiency virus-negative patients. Mean age of the human immunodeficiency virus-positive patient group was 37 years vs. 40 years for the human immunodeficiency virus-negative patient group. Thirty-one human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients (52 percent) were classified as having AIDS, and the remaining 29 patients (48 percent) were asymptomatic. Mean T helper cell count in the human immunodeficiency virus-positive patient group was 277 cells per microliter. Fistulous tracts were intersphincteric (n = 56), transsphincteric (n = 41), suprasphincteric (n = 2), and incomplete (n = 47). Incomplete fistulas were identified in 33 (55 percent) human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients vs. 14 (16 percent) human immunodeficiency virus-negative patients (P < 0.001). Of the 47 incomplete fistulas, 37 (79 percent) were found in association with an abscess cavity. All ten patients with an incomplete fistula into a blind sinus were human immunodeficiency virus-positive. The incidence of an incomplete fistula without an abscess was significantly higher in the human immunodeficiency virus-positive patient group (17 percent) compared with the human immunodeficiency virus-negative patient group (0 percent; P < 0.001).
Anal fistulas in HIV-positive patients arise from the dentate line in similar locations to human immunodeficiency virus negative patients. However, human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients were more likely to have incomplete anal fistulas than human immunodeficiency virus-negative patients. Furthermore, human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients are predisposed to incomplete fistulas leading into a blind sinus.
尽管肛门直肠疾病在人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)阳性患者中很常见,但对于该患者群体肛瘘的类型及解剖分布了解甚少。本研究的目的是通过回顾性病历审查,比较HIV阳性患者与HIV阴性患者肛瘘的解剖特征。
对146例年龄小于50岁的男性肛瘘患者的病历进行审查。不完全肛瘘是指那些从内口通向盲窦或未引流脓肿腔的瘘管。
有60例HIV阳性患者和86例HIV阴性患者。HIV阳性患者组的平均年龄为37岁,而HIV阴性患者组为40岁。31例(52%)HIV阳性患者被归类为患有艾滋病,其余29例(48%)无症状。HIV阳性患者组的平均辅助性T细胞计数为每微升277个细胞。瘘管类型为括约肌间型(n = 56)、经括约肌型(n = 41)、括约肌上型(n = 2)和不完全型(n = 47)。33例(55%)HIV阳性患者存在不完全肛瘘,而HIV阴性患者为14例(16%)(P < 0.001)。在47例不完全肛瘘中,37例(79%)与脓肿腔相关。所有10例通向盲窦的不完全肛瘘患者均为HIV阳性。与HIV阴性患者组(0%;P < 0.001)相比,HIV阳性患者组无脓肿的不完全肛瘘发生率显著更高。
HIV阳性患者的肛瘘起源于齿状线,位置与HIV阴性患者相似。然而,HIV阳性患者比HIV阴性患者更易发生不完全肛瘘。此外,HIV阳性患者易发生通向盲窦的不完全肛瘘。