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Dr. Todd Ponsky

Pediatric Surgery · View profile →

Pediatric Colorectal Contraversies Part I: Pediatric Colorectal Contraversies...

Video Published 2018-09-16 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Expert panel discussion on controversial management approaches to pediatric anorectal malformations, focusing on decision-making between primary repair versus colostomy, perineal fistula management, and intraoperative complications. Emphasizes anatomic variations and clinical judgment in newborn colorectal surgery.

Key Takeaways

  • Perineal fistulas and bucket-handle malformations are low anorectal defects typically amenable to primary anoplasty at birth without colostomy.
  • Urethral injury is the most feared intraoperative complication even in simple low malformations; surgeons must remain vigilant about urethral anatomy.
  • If the neonate is critically ill or premature, consider colostomy rather than primary repair despite the low nature of the defect.
  • Perineal skin appearance reliably predicts low rectal location, but rare anatomic variants exist where the rectum is higher than anticipated.
  • Occasionally a second fistula (e.g., to urethra) may coexist with a perineal fistula, requiring intraoperative flexibility in surgical approach.

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