Trans-anal small bowel evisceration in a patient with a perforated rectal prolapse

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36303/SAJS.3998

Keywords:

small bowel evisceration, rectal prolapse

Abstract

An 85-year-old lady with a history of chronic constipation presented with gangrenous small bowel protruding from the anus through a hole in a prolapsed rectum. At surgery, a resection of 125 cm of gangrenous small bowel was performed in the  perineum prior to laparotomy, where rectal repair was followed by the creation of a sigmoid loop colostomy and double-barrel ileostomy. This avoided an intrabdominal anastomosis which was felt likely to complicate due to the lady’s intraoperative haemodynamic instability requiring inotropic support. This tailored management of a trans-anal small bowel evisceration through a rectal prolapse resulted in recovery and a patient who was content with her stomas and preferred to live with them rather than have continuity restored.

Author Biographies

HJ Lee, Klerksdorp-Tshepong Hospital Complex

Department of General Surgery, Klerksdorp-Tshepong Hospital Complex, South Africa

D Hendricks, Klerksdorp-Tshepong Hospital Complex

Department of General Surgery, Klerksdorp-Tshepong Hospital Complex, South Africa

T Rangaka, Klerksdorp-Tshepong Hospital Complex

Department of General Surgery, Klerksdorp-Tshepong Hospital Complex, South Africa
Department of Surgery, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

A Abd Elrahman, Klerksdorp-Tshepong Hospital Complex

Department of General Surgery, Klerksdorp-Tshepong Hospital Complex, South Africa
Department of Surgery, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

Published

2025-12-13

Issue

Section

Case Report