Colorectal Quiz: Episode 42 - HD Constipation podcast cover art
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Colorectal Quiz: Episode 42 - HD Constipation

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Topic overview

Case discussion of a 20-year-old Down syndrome patient with persistent constipation following Hirschsprung pull-through at 6 months. Workup including exam under anesthesia, rectal biopsy, contrast enema, and manometry revealed no mechanical obstruction but hypertrophic nerves and absent rectal-anal inhibitory reflex, highlighting the challenge of distinguishing transition zone from acquired changes in long-term Hirschsprung management.

Key takeaways

  • One-third of Hirschsprung patients remain constipated post-pull-through despite anatomically successful surgery, requiring aggressive medical management.
  • Rectal biopsy showing ganglion cells plus normal calretinin staining provides dual confirmation that residual aganglionosis is not the cause.
  • Hypertrophic nerves in older constipated patients may represent chronic decompensation rather than retained transition zone tissue.
  • Absent recto-anal inhibitory reflex post-Hirschsprung is expected; patients can compensate by learning alternative defecation strategies.
  • Evaluate for mechanical causes (stricture, twist, retained dilated segment) before attributing post-pull-through constipation to functional etiology.

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