The specialist surgeons will assess and advise you in The London Clinic’s comfortable, private, and well-equipped consulting rooms.
They will take a detailed medical history, examine your fistula, and ask about the impact your symptoms have on your health, wellbeing, and quality of life.
Your consultant may arrange tests and investigations in the cutting-edge imaging suite.
These may include:
- Blood tests to exclude underlying conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease
- Stool samples to check for inflammation
- Swabs to check for infection
- An internal ultrasound scan of your back passage
- Magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI scan
- Computer tomography or CT scan
Anal fistula surgery at The London Clinic
The surgeons at The London Clinic usually perform anal fistula surgery under general anaesthetic. Â The type of procedure will depend on the position of your fistula.
Some procedures can be performed using spinal anaesthesia, so you’ll be awake during surgery, but your lower body will be numb.
Fistulotomy
The most commonly performed fistula surgery is suitable for simple fistulas that are below the sphincter, or that cross the muscles that make up the lower part of the sphincter muscles only.
Your consultant surgeon will carefully place a surgical probe into the fistula. They will cut the skin and tissue above the fistula, then open up the fistula’s roof.
They will clean and dress the fistula, leaving it open with no stitches. It will gradually heal from the base up, with healthy tissue.
For branching or high fistulas, your surgeon may need to perform more complex or staged surgery over several months.
This helps reduce the risk of damage to the anal sphincter muscles, which can lead to incontinence:
Seton insertion
The specialist may insert a specially designed thread called a seton through the fistula. The thread helps the fistula drain effectively, reducing infection, and aiding healing. Some fistulas will heal using setons alone; for others, it can be the first stage of treatment.
Staged fistulotomy
The surgeon performs a series of operations over several months. They gradually open up the fistula, inserting a seton after each procedure to aid drainage.
Cutting seton
A specially-designed seton can progressively cut through the muscle of the sphincter. It gradually opens the fistula while allowing the tissue to heal and form scar tissue, reducing the incontinence risk.
Glues and plugs
Products can sometimes be inserted into the fistula to block the canal and allow it to heal.
LIFT procedure
If your fistula passed through the sphincter muscles, this procedure might be necessary. The surgeon closes one end of the fistula, then cuts the rest open, reducing damage to the sphincter.
Anal advancement flaps
The surgeon can create a tissue flap from the anal canal and fix it over the fistula opening.
Temporary colostomy
Rarely a colostomy is necessary to rest the bowel and allow the fistula to heal.