Rectal foreign body
Rectal foreign body | |
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Radiograph of a male abdomen with a vibrator inside the rectum | |
Specialty | Emergency medicine, general surgery |
Rectal foreign bodies are large foreign items found in the rectum that can be assumed to have been inserted through the anus, rather than reaching the rectum via the mouth and gastrointestinal tract. It can be of clinical relevance if the patient cannot remove it the way they intended. Smaller, ingested foreign bodies, such as bones eaten with food, can sometimes be found stuck in the rectum upon X-ray and are rarely of clinical relevance.
Rectal foreign bodies are a subgroup of foreign bodies in the alimentary tract.[1][2]
Signs and symptoms
If the foreign body is too big to allow feces from the colon to pass, a mechanical ileus may occur. The distension of the rectum and the disruption of the peristasis reinforce this effect.
The foreign body may cause infections, destroying the intestinal wall. Depending on the location of the perforation, this may lead to a peritonitis due to the feces or an abscess in the retroperitoneal space.
Smaller objects that injure the intestinal wall, but do not perforate it, may be encapsulated by a
Complications
The most common – but still rare –
Medical literature describes some deaths due to rectal foreign bodies, but they are very rare and usually classified as autoerotic fatality. A 75-year-old patient died due to a rectal perforation caused by a mentally ill person using a cane.[6] Another middle-aged patient died due to a rectal perforation by a vibrator. The perforation was sutured and the patient received intensive medical care, but he contracted acute respiratory distress syndrome and systemic inflammatory response syndrome due to the trauma, resulting in multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and death.[7] There is a paper describing a death after a perforation with a shoehorn.[8] The rectum has to be nursed after a surgical procedure until healing is complete. A 54-year-old man, who had been operated on twice in order to remove a foreign body (a cucumber and a parsnip), died due to a peritonitis after he inserted two apples into the rectum before the wound had healed.[9]
Causes
Reasons for foreign rectal bodies vary wildly, but in most cases they are of sexual or criminal motivation.
In rare cases, the patient inserted the object into the rectum without a way to remove it intending to receive attention and pity from doctors and nurses. This behaviour is categorized as
Another cause may be attempted self-treatment of diseases. One patient attempted to treat his chronic
Accidents or torture may cause an involuntary insertion of a foreign body.[15] A mercury medical thermometer inserted into the anus in order to measure the temperature, but broke off while inside, is an example of a foreign rectal body due to an accident.[16] Ancient Greece knew the Rhaphanidosis as a punishment for male adulterers. It involved the insertion of a radish into the anus. Many self-inserted rectal bodies are stated as accidentally by the patients due to feelings of shame.
There are several reasons that contribute to the jamming of rectal bodies inside the rectum. Many of the objects used for sexual stimulation have a conical tip in order to facilitate penetration, while the base is flat. Extraction by the user may be impossible if the base of the object passed the anus towards the rectum. In order to receive a stronger stimulation, the object may be inserted deeper than intended. In this case, the sphincter prevents, by mechanical means, the extraction of the foreign body.[3]
By mouth
The other way for a foreign body to travel through the digestive system (after oral intake and passage through the entire intestines) happens very often, but is only rarely medically relevant. Other constrictions, such as the
Plant-based food, especially
Objects
Type and size of the foreign rectal bodies are diverse and may exceed the anatomical-physiological imagination.[10]
Objects documented in literature include:
- Razor, screw, screwdriver, small rolled tool bag (15×12 cm, including tools 620 g), hairpin, milk can opener, drill bit
- Short staffs, such as a 27 cm long chair leg, a 19 cm long spade handle and a broken off broom handle, extension parts for a vacuum cleaner
- Containers, sometimes exceeding 0.5 L in volume, e.g. sparkling wine bottles, bottles of Coca-Cola, jam pots, small beer glasses, cups
- Spray can, light bulb, vacuum tube, candle
- WWII artillery shell requiring attention from a bomb squad[24]
- Table tennis ball, Boccia ball
- Ammunition, firecracker
- Vibrator, rubber rod, dildo
- a toy car
- spectacles, a suitcase key, a tobacco pouch and a magazine at the same time
- plastic tooth brush case[10][3][9][25][26][12]
Not all objects are solid. In 1987, a case was documented of a patient who administered a cement enema. After it solidified and impacted, the resulting block had to be surgically extracted.[27] Another extreme case occurred in November 1953. A depressed man inserted a 15 cm long cardboard tube into his rectum and tossed a lighted firecracker into the tube's opening, resulting in a large hole in his rectum.[28]
Diagnosis
Many patients feel ashamed during the anamnesis and provide information only reluctantly. This may lead to missing information that may be important during therapy. For the same reason, patients may not visit a doctor until very late. Trusting and sensitive care for the ashamed and uncomfortable patients is paramount for a successful therapy[29] and may be life-saving.[30]
Usually, several
An endoscopy, which may also be of use during therapy, facilitates the identification and localisation of the object inside the rectum.[31]
Information about the foreign body obtained in those ways are of high importance during therapy, as a perforation of the rectum or the anus is to be absolutely avoided.
Treatment

The therapeutic measures to remove the foreign body can be as diverse as the objects inside the rectum. In many instances, the foreign bodies consist of fragile materials, such as glass. Most patients wait for several hours or even days until they visit a doctor. Before they do, they often repeatedly try to remove the object themselves or by a layperson. This often worsens the situation for a successful extraction.
In most cases, the foreign body can be removed endoscopically. Vibrators, for example, can be often removed using a large sling usually used to remove
There have been several cases where instruments used in child birth have proven their worth for the removal of those foreign bodies, such as the
There have been successful cases using argon-plasma coagulation. The object in question was a green apple wrapped in cellophane inside the rectum of a 44-year-old patient. The argon-beam coagulation shrunk the apple by more than 50%, enabling its removal. Previous extraction attempts using endoscopic tools failed due to the flat surface of the object.[36]
If the object is too far up, in the area of the
In difficult cases, a laparotomy may be necessary. Statistically, this is the case in about 10 percent of patients.[10] The large intestine can be manipulated inside the abdominal cavity, making it possible for it to wander in the direction of the anus and be grabbed there. A surgical opening of the large intestines can be indication in very difficult cases, especially if the manipulation of the object may pose a serious health risk. This may be the case with a jammed drug condom.[31]
Anaesthesia
Mild cases may need a
Aftercare
After the surgery, a sigmoidoscopy – a colonoscopy focused on the first 60 cm of the colon – is good practice in order to rule out possible perforation and injury of the rectum and the colon sigmoideum.[37] Stationary aftercare may be indicated.
Examples
Object | Procedure | Anaesthesia | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Ball pen | Polypectomy sling | N.A. | [38] |
Water-filled balloon | Punction | N.A. | [39] |
Chicken bone | Polypectomy sling | N.A. | [40] |
Toothpick | Polypectomy sling | N.A. | [41] |
Apple in cellophane | Defragmentation using APC | none | [36] |
Glass bottle | Biopsy forceps | General anaesthesia | [32] |
Vibrator | Polypectomy sling | none | [32] |
Vial | Sengstaken–Blakemore tube | N.A. | [42] |
Vial | Polypectomy sling | N.A. | [43] |
Enema tip | Polypectomy sling | N.A. | [43] |
Vibrator | Biopsy forceps | N.A. | [43] |
Pencil | Polypectomy sling | N.A. | [44] |
Iron rod | Two-channel endoscope and wires | N.A. | [45] |
Bottleneck | Foley catheter | General anaesthesia | [46] |
Spray tank | Achalasy balloon | None | [37] |
Sponge-like toy ball | Suction cup | General anaesthesia | [47] |
Vibrator | Forceps and anal dilation | Local anaesthesia | [48] |
Vibrator | Hooked tongs | Local anaesthesia | [49] |
Bottle of aftershave | Bone holding forceps with rubber feet | Spinal anaesthesia | [50] |
Chicken bone | Fingers | None | [18] |
Aerosol-can cap | Grasping forceps and anal dilation | General anaesthesia | [51] |
Vase | Filling with plaster | General anaesthesia | [52] |
Glass container | Extraction using plaster | Spinal anaesthesia | [53] |
Glass container | Tracheal tube | Local anaesthesia | [54] |
Apple | Two-handed manipulation | Local anaesthesia | [55] |
Glass container | Foley catheter | General anaesthesia | [56] |
Glass bottle | Suction cup | General anaesthesia | [29] |
100-watt electric bulb | Three Foley catheters | N.A. | [57] |
Thermometer | Biopsy forceps | General anaesthesia | [32] |
Vibrator | transanal Kocher's forceps | Local anaesthesia | [32] |
Bowling bottle (Bottle in the shape of a pin) | Forceps | General anaesthesia | [32] |
Perfume bottle | manual | Spinal anaesthesia | [25] |
Piece of wood | manual | General anaesthesia | [58] |
Toothbrush container | Fogarty catheter
|
N.A. | [59] |
Oven mitt
|
Forceps, after anal dilation | General anaesthesia | [60] |
Drainpipe | forceps in childbirth | General anaesthesia | [33] |
Pétanque ball | Electromagnet | General anaesthesia | [61] |
Carrot | Myoma lifter | N.A. | [62] |
Glass object | Suction cup | Spinal anaesthesia | [34] |
Rubber ball | manual extraction after anal dilation | General anaesthesia | [63] |
Wooden staff | Two-handed anal dilation | Spinal anaesthesia | [63] |
Bottle | manual after anal dilation | General anaesthesia | [64] |
Dildo | Myoma lifter | N.A. | [65] |
Light bulb | Abdominal compression | Spinal anaesthesia | [66] |
- APC = Argon beam-coagulation
- N.A. = Not available
(Source:[37])
Epidemiology
There is no reliable data about the incidence of clinically meaningful foreign rectal bodies. It may have increased in the long term[17] as it is observed more often in recent times.[67]
The incident rate is significantly higher for men than for women. The gender ratio is in the area of 28:1.
The first documented case dates from the 16th century.[12][71]
Other animals
Foreign rectal bodies are rare in veterinary medicine. A passage through the entire intestines, followed by a stay inside the rectum is – as with humans – rare.[72] Animals may have bezoars out of different materials, which may migrate to the rectum and cause problems.[73]
Ig Nobel Prize
The Ig Nobel Prize was awarded in 1995 to David B. Busch and James R. Starling from Madison, Wisconsin, for their 1986 article Rectal foreign bodies: Case Reports and a Comprehensive Review of the World's Literature[25] (see List of Ig Nobel Prize winners).[74]
See also
- Đorđe Martinović incident
- Foreign body in alimentary tract
- Urethral foreign body insertion
- Butt plug
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: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link - ^ Improbable Research: Winners of the Ig® Nobel Prize.
External links
- eMedicine gastrointestinal emergency medicine
- Medical Journal of Australia Archived February 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- British Dental Journal case report: Don't forget your toothbrush! (subscribers only - with useful bibliography)
- X-rays of rectal bodies Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine at the Berlin Charité
- Sturz in die Kiste. In: Der Spiegel Ausgabe 41, 1991, S. 317–320.
- Alles im A… In: einestages vom 7. Juni 2007