Anorectal Abscess & Fistula - Genesis & Germs
- Anorectal Abscess: Acute infection in spaces around the anus/rectum.
- Fistula-in-ano: Chronic abnormal tract connecting the anal canal to perianal skin.
- Genesis (Cryptoglandular Hypothesis):
- Infection originates in anal glands (Hermann's glands) in the intersphincteric space.
- These glands drain into anal crypts (of Morgagni).
- Duct obstruction → stasis → bacterial infection → abscess.
- Abscess may drain spontaneously or require surgery, potentially forming a fistula.

- Causative Organisms (Polymicrobial):
- Escherichia coli (most common aerobe)
- Bacteroides fragilis (common anaerobe)
- Staphylococcus aureus
- Enterococcus spp.
- Streptococcus spp.
⭐ The cryptoglandular theory is the most accepted etiology for common, non-specific anorectal abscesses and fistulas.
Anorectal Abscess & Fistula - Mapping the Maze
Anorectal Abscesses: Origin: Cryptoglandular infection.
- Types & Features:
Type Location Key Feature Perianal Subcutaneous Most common (60%), fluctuant Ischiorectal Ischiorectal fossa Large, tender Intersphincteric Intersphincteric Deep pain, difficult Dx Supralevator Above levator ani Sepsis, deep pain

Fistula-in-Ano: Chronic sequela of abscess.
- Parks Classification:
Type Pathway Frequency Intersphincteric Intersphincteric ~70% Transsphincteric Crosses ext. sphincter ~25% Suprasphincteric Over puborectalis ~5% Extrasphincteric Outside sphincters <1%

- Goodsall's Rule: Predicts internal opening.
- Anterior: straight track.
- Posterior: curved to posterior midline.
- Exception: Anterior >3cm from verge may curve.

⭐ Perianal abscess is the most common type of anorectal abscess.
Anorectal Abscess & Fistula - Signs & Scrutiny
- Symptoms:
- Abscess: Acute throbbing pain, localized swelling, erythema, fever.
- Fistula: Chronic purulent/serosanguinous discharge, recurrent abscess, external opening, pruritus ani.
- Examination:
- Inspection: External opening, induration, inflammation.
- Palpation: Tenderness, fluctuance (abscess), tract (fistula).
- DRE: Pain may limit (abscess); identify internal opening (fistula).
- Probing: Gentle; often under anaesthesia (EUA) to trace tract.
- Investigations:
- Anoscopy/Proctoscopy: Visualize internal opening.
- Complex/Recurrent Fistulas:
- Endoanal Ultrasound (EAUS/ERUS): Sphincter integrity, tract relation.
- MRI Pelvis: Gold standard; delineates entire tract, extensions, abscesses.
⭐ MRI is the gold standard investigation for complex or recurrent fistula-in-ano.
- Diagnostic Algorithm:
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Anorectal Abscess & Fistula - Fixing the Flow
- Abscess Management: Prompt Incision & Drainage (I&D) is mainstay; cruciate or radial incisions close to anal verge. Antibiotics: only if significant cellulitis, systemic signs (fever, ↑WBC), immunocompromised, or prosthetic heart valves.
- Fistula Surgery Principles:
- Eradicate tract, prevent recurrence.
- Preserve anal sphincter function & continence.
- Identify primary (internal) opening. 📌 Goodsall's Rule aids this.
- Surgical Options (Fistula):
- Simple/Low: Fistulotomy/Fistulectomy.
- High/Complex: Seton (draining/cutting), LIFT (Ligation of Intersphincteric Fistula Tract), VAAFT, Advancement flap, Fibrin glue/plug, FiLaC (Fistula laser closure).
⭐ The primary goal of fistula surgery is to cure the fistula while preserving continence.
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High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Cryptoglandular infection in the intersphincteric space is the primary cause.
- Perianal abscess is most common; supralevator abscesses can be deep and insidious.
- Goodsall's rule predicts fistula tracks: anterior openings = straight paths, posterior = curved paths.
- Intersphincteric fistulas are the most frequent type.
- MRI is gold standard imaging for complex or recurrent fistulas.
- Abscesses require prompt incision and drainage; fistulas often need fistulotomy or seton.
- Consider Crohn's disease with multiple, recurrent, or complex fistulas.
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