How do you treat bowel incontinence after prostrate seed implantation?
I have a client who believes that there is no treatment for this
What does his doctor have to say about this? I mean, he should be the one your ‘client’ needs to speak to
This entry was posted
on Friday, January 15th, 2010 at 1:57 pm and is filed under Incontinence.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
2 Responses to “How do you treat bowel incontinence after prostrate seed implantation?”
Well, it is rather difficult to treat, to be sure.
The problem is essentially that the rectum becomes markedly inflamed from the radiation, causing it on the one hand to tend to exude fluid into the bowel rather than absorb fluid and solidify the bowel content as is its normal function, so you tend to more liquid faeces.
On the other hand, the irritation causes it to signal the need to evacuate more than it normally would, and thus cause the urgency which results in the incontinence – the problem is not that the anus cannot close and form a seal adequately, but that the erratic urgency overrides.
Apart from the measures of which you would already be aware, of using bulking agents to firm up the faeces and avoid known aperients, there is little to suggest.
It should however settle with time. References : Same advice as for external radiotherapy.
January 15th, 2010 at 6:40 pm
What does his doctor have to say about this? I mean, he should be the one your ‘client’ needs to speak to
References :
January 15th, 2010 at 7:12 pm
Well, it is rather difficult to treat, to be sure.
The problem is essentially that the rectum becomes markedly inflamed from the radiation, causing it on the one hand to tend to exude fluid into the bowel rather than absorb fluid and solidify the bowel content as is its normal function, so you tend to more liquid faeces.
On the other hand, the irritation causes it to signal the need to evacuate more than it normally would, and thus cause the urgency which results in the incontinence – the problem is not that the anus cannot close and form a seal adequately, but that the erratic urgency overrides.
Apart from the measures of which you would already be aware, of using bulking agents to firm up the faeces and avoid known aperients, there is little to suggest.
It should however settle with time.
References :
Same advice as for external radiotherapy.