Does treatment of constipation improve faecal incontinence in institutionalized elderly patients?

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Abstract

Objective: To evaluate whether faecal incontinence can be improved by treatment of constipation in elderly patients with faecal incontinence associated with impairment of rectal emptying. Design: A prospective randomized study with a 2-month follow-up. Setting: Five long-term care units. Subjects: 206 patients with daily faecal incontinence associated with chronic rectal emptying impairments such as faecal impaction received either a single osmotic laxative (group I) or an osmotic agent along with a rectal stimulant and weekly enemas (group II). Measurements: Episodes of faecal incontinence and associated details of soiled laundry (used as indicators of the workload for caregivers). We performed periodic digital rectal examinations on group II patients to evaluate whether treatment resulted in complete and long-lasting rectal emptying. We compared data between groups and in group II between persistently constipated patients and patients with complete rectal emptying. Results: The frequency of faecal incontinence did not significantly differ between the two groups. The 23 patients in group II who had complete rectal emptying had 35% fewer episodes of faecal incontinence and 42% fewer incidents of soiled laundry than the rest group. Conclusions: When long-lasting and complete rectal emtying is achieved by laxatives, the number of episodes of faecal incontinence as well as the workload for caregivers is reduced.

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Chassagne, P., Jego, A., Gloc, P., Capet, C., Trivalle, C., Doucet, J., … Bercoff, E. (2000). Does treatment of constipation improve faecal incontinence in institutionalized elderly patients? Age and Ageing, 29(2), 159–164. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/29.2.159

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