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Gynecologic Concerns: Cloaca and Complex ARMs

Video Published 2019-01-11 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Surgical lecture on gynecologic management of cloacal and complex anorectal malformations, emphasizing early assessment of Mullerian structures to prevent menstrual obstruction. Discusses intraoperative techniques for evaluating reproductive tract patency and timing of pubertal monitoring in patients with unified vaginal reconstruction.

Key Takeaways

  • 41% of cloacal patients develop menstrual obstruction requiring reoperation; assess Müllerian structures during definitive surgery or colostomy closure.
  • Intraoperative fallopian tube cannulation with feeding tube and saline instillation tests Müllerian patency and identifies unrecognized vaginal anatomy.
  • Begin gynecologic surveillance 6-9 months post-puberty onset; menarche typically occurs 1.5-3 years after breast development in cloacal patients.
  • Unified vaginas with dual uteri require serial imaging to confirm bilateral drainage; medical suppression buys time if obstruction detected.
  • Common channel length in cloaca determines vaginal reach to perineum; plan alternative approaches if native tissue inadequate for reconstruction.

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