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  2. Fecal incontinence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fecal_incontinence

    More than 50% of hospitalized seriously ill patients rated bladder or fecal incontinence as "worse than death". [7] Management may be achieved through an individualized mix of dietary, pharmacologic, and surgical measures. Health care professionals are often poorly informed about treatment options, [2] and may fail to recognize the effect of FI ...

  3. Surgical management of fecal incontinence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surgical_management_of...

    Fecal diversion (stoma creation) The relative effectiveness of surgical options for treating fecal incontinence is not known. [2] A combination of different surgical and non-surgical therapies may be optimal. [2] A surgical treatment algorithm has been proposed for FI, [3] although this did not appear to include some surgical options. Isolated ...

  4. List of dog diseases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dog_diseases

    Urinary incontinence* is leakage of urine, usually due to incompetence of the urethral sphincter in adult dogs and ectopic ureter (a congenital condition in which the ureter enters the urinary tract posterior to the urethral sphincter) in puppies. In adult dogs it is most commonly seen in large spayed females.

  5. Rectal discharge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rectal_discharge

    Symptoms include a painful lump, bleeding, pruritus ani, tenesmus, discharge or possibly fecal incontinence. SSC in the anal canal most commonly causes bleeding, but may also cause anal pain, a lump, pruritus ani, discharge, tenesmus, change in bowel habits and fecal incontinence. Because these symptoms are so unspecific, and because symptoms ...

  6. Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percutaneous_tibial_nerve...

    Percutaneous tibial nerve stimulation (PTNS), also referred to as posterior tibial nerve stimulation, is the least invasive form of neuromodulation used to treat overactive bladder (OAB) and the associated symptoms of urinary urgency, urinary frequency and urge incontinence.

  7. Bowel management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowel_management

    Bowel management is the process which a person with a bowel disability uses to manage fecal incontinence or constipation. [1] People who have a medical condition which impairs control of their defecation use bowel management techniques to choose a predictable time and place to evacuate. [ 1 ]

  8. Bile acid malabsorption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bile_acid_malabsorption

    A persistent (chronic) history of diarrhea, with watery or mushy, unformed stools, (types 6 and 7 on the Bristol stool scale), sometimes with steatorrhea, increased frequency and urgency of defecation are common manifestations, often with fecal incontinence and other gastrointestinal symptoms such as abdominal swelling, bloating and abdominal pain.

  9. Malone antegrade continence enema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malone_antegrade...

    It is done to treat fecal incontinence unresponsive to treatment with medications. It is frequently done with a procedure (Mitrofanoff procedure) to treat urinary incontinence as the two often co-exist, [3] such as in spina bifida.

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