Abstract
Obstetric injury is the most frequent cause of acquired rectovaginal fistulas but infection and other forms of trauma may also result in these fistulas. After an obstetric injury, the fistula may be manifest immediately but more frequently appears 7–10 days after delivery. Fistulas occur most often after a third- or fourth-degree laceration. Inadequate repair, breakdown of the repair, or infection may result in fistula formation. In developed nations, rectovaginal fistulas occur after 0.06–0.1% of vaginal deliveries. Disease processes may also cause rectovaginal fistulas. Cryptoglandular infection may result in an abscess spontaneously draining into the vagina resulting in a fistula. Rectal and gynecologic malignancies may result in fistulas as a result of local extension of the tumor or secondary to treatment with radiotherapy. Women with inflammatory bowel disease, Crohn’s disease more frequently than ulcerative colitis, may develop rectovaginal fistulas. Operative trauma may also result in a rectovaginal fistula. Complications of rectal or vaginal surgery usually result in fistulas opening low in the rectum. High fistulas are most frequently complications of low stapled colorectal or ileoanal anastomoses. Pouch vaginal fistulas are reported in 3–12% of patients. The mechanism is usually that a portion of the posterior vaginal wall is included in the anastomosis or that an abscess secondary to an anastomotic leak drains into the vagina. Fistulas have also been reported after vaginal dilatation of a radiated vaginal cuff, fecal impaction, viral and bacterial infection in human immunodeficiency virus patients and sexual assault.
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© 2009 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
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Beck, D.E., Roberts, P.L., Rombeau, J.L., Stamos, M.J., Wexner, S.D. (2009). Benign Anorectal: Rectovaginal Fistulas. In: Wexner, S., Stamos, M., Rombeau, J., Roberts, P., Beck, D. (eds) The ASCRS Manual of Colon and Rectal Surgery. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/b12857_14
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/b12857_14
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