Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
Lisa B Signorello a Obstetrics and Gynecology Epidemiology Center,
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 221 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, United States, b Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Brigham
and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis Street,
Boston, MA 02115, United States
Correspondence to: L B
Signorello, International Epidemiology Institute, 1450 Research
Boulevard, Suite 550, Rockville, MD 20850, United States lbsignore{at}aol.com
| |
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Objective:
To evaluate the relation between midline
episiotomy and postpartum anal incontinence.
Postpartum faecal and flatus incontinence (anal incontinence) is a
potentially debilitating condition, the incidence of which has been
grossly underappreciated, mainly due to the reluctance of women to seek
medical attention for this sensitive problem.1-3 Recent
epidemiological studies have highlighted the fact that anal
incontinence after childbirth is not as rare as has been assumed. As
many as 6-10% of all women experience new defecatory symptoms
postpartum,4 and anywhere between 13% and 20% experience loss of control of flatus.
5 6
Of women who experience a
third or fourth degree perineal laceration during childbirth, 30-50% have been reported to experience anal incontinence,6-8
even several months after childbirth and despite a primary sphincter
repair at the time of the injury. Moreover, recent studies have
shown that anal incontinence often starts in the early puerperium and persists, contrary to the commonly held view that it does not manifest
until years after the obstetric event.
1 9
To date, small clinical follow up studies have been undertaken to
determine the natural course of anal sphincter disruption or symptoms
of incontinence
7 8 10 11
as well as to identify predictors of these conditions.
1 2 12
Studies of
predictors have largely implicated obstetric instrumentation
(forceps
2 12
and vacuum extractors1),
but there is also some evidence that, independent of its association
with instrumental deliveries, episiotomy (surgical incision of the
perineum) may increase the risk of sphincter injury.2
Advocates of routine episiotomy during childbirth claim that it helps
to avoid relaxation of the pelvic floor and perineal trauma, typically
documented as third and fourth degree perineal
lacerations.13 Abundant evidence now exists, however, to
show that episiotomy does not prevent trauma to the
perineum14 and that its use is typically associated with a
greater risk of high degree perineal tearing.15-18
Two questions that remain unresolved are to what extent does the risk
of postpartum anal incontinence vary by degree and type of perineal
trauma and does episiotomy predispose to postpartum anal incontinence?
More specifically, do women who have episiotomies have a different risk
of anal incontinence than women allowed to tear spontaneously to the
same degree? To examine these issues we designed a retrospective cohort
study to estimate the risk of anal incontinence among a large
consecutive sample of primiparous women.
Participants
Classification of birth trauma
Data collection
Design:
Retrospective cohort study with three study arms and six months of follow up.
Setting:
University teaching hospital.
Participants:
Primiparous women who vaginally
delivered a live full term, singleton baby between 1 August 1996 and 8 February 1997: 209 who received an episiotomy; 206 who did not receive an episiotomy but experienced a second, third, or fourth degree spontaneous perineal laceration; and 211 who experienced either no
laceration or a first degree perineal laceration.
Main outcome measures:
Self reported faecal and flatus
incontinence at three and six months postpartum.
Results:
Women who had episiotomies had a higher risk of faecal incontinence at three (odds ratio 5.5, 95% confidence interval 1.8 to 16.2) and six (3.7, 0.9 to 15.6) months postpartum compared with women with an intact perineum. Compared with women with a
spontaneous laceration, episiotomy tripled the risk of faecal
incontinence at three months (95% confidence interval 1.3 to 7.9) and
six months (0.7 to 11.2) postpartum, and doubled the risk of flatus
incontinence at three months (1.3 to 3.4) and six months (1.2 to 3.7)
postpartum. A non-extending episiotomy (that is, second degree surgical
incision) tripled the risk of faecal incontinence (1.1 to 9.0) and
nearly doubled the risk of flatus incontinence (1.0 to 3.0) at three
months postpartum compared with women who had a second degree
spontaneous tear. The effect of episiotomy was independent of maternal
age, infant birth weight, duration of second stage of labour, use of
obstetric instrumentation during delivery, and complications of labour.
Conclusions:
Midline episiotomy is not effective in
protecting the perineum and sphincters during childbirth and may impair
anal continence.
![]()
Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
All participants were drawn from a population of primiparous
women who had a singleton, vertex, full term (>37 weeks), vaginal
delivery at the Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston between 1 August 1996 and 8 February 1997. From this study base we constructed
three cohorts: an "episiotomy group" comprising women who received
an episiotomy during childbirth; a "tear group" comprising women
who did not receive an episiotomy but who experienced a second, third,
or fourth degree spontaneous perineal laceration; and an "intact
group" comprising women who did not receive an episiotomy and who
experienced either no perineal laceration or a first degree
(superficial) spontaneous perineal laceration. Categorisation into one
of these three groups was facilitated by computerised labour and
delivery records.
We classified the degree of tearing according to standard practice
definitions: first degree tear
a perineal laceration extending through
the vaginal mucosa and perineal skin only; second degree
tear
laceration extending into the perineal muscles; third degree
tear
laceration involving the external anal sphincter; fourth degree
tear
laceration affecting both the anal sphincter and the anorectal
mucosa. Perineal trauma was recorded in the birth record by the
physician or midwife who attended the birth; no one at the delivery was
aware of the study at the time of this recording.
On a weekly basis beginning 29 January 1997 we contacted by post
all eligible women who would have been six months postpartum during the
following week. For women who comprised the tear group and the intact
group, this continued until 31 July 1997. For women who comprised the
episiotomy group, a large enough sample (predetermined goal of 200 women) was obtained by 30 April 1997, after which time no women who had
had episiotomies were included on the mailing list. Each mailing
consisted of a letter describing the study, a research consent form, a
self administered questionnaire, and a postage paid return envelope.
The letter informed potential participants of our aim to determine
which types of medical problems occur after the first vaginal delivery but did not disclose that episiotomy was an exposure of interest.
Outcome
The self administered questionnaire elicited information regarding
demographic and anthropometric factors as well as several pregnancy,
labour, delivery, and postpartum experiences, including anal
incontinence. Participants were asked to recall their experience with
faecal and flatus incontinence at three months postpartum and to report
on current occurrences of incontinence (six months postpartum). Faecal
incontinence and flatus incontinence were defined in the questionnaire
as "having a bowel movement" or "passing gas," respectively,
"when you don't mean to." We also asked the women to report any
history of anal incontinence, allowing us to identify strictly new
versus prevalent cases. All data from the questionnaire were
subsequently linked to computerised labour and delivery records to
incorporate clinical data such as the use of obstetric instrumentation,
infant birth weight, duration of the second stage of labour (calculated
as the time of birth minus the time at which full cervical dilation was
achieved), and complications arising during labour.
Statistical analysis
Crude risks were calculated as the number of newly
incontinent women divided by the number of women with no history of
that type of incontinence in each group. To calculate relative risks
and accommodate simultaneous control of several covariates we used
logistic regression to estimate adjusted odds ratios. All analyses were
performed with STATA statistical software. For most
analyses there were four distinct comparisons of interest: episiotomy
group versus intact group, episiotomy group versus tear group, tear
group versus intact group, and women with second degree
(that is, non-extending) episiotomies versus women with second degree
spontaneous perineal tears.
|
| |
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Table 1 gives descriptive characteristics of the study population. The mean (SD) age of the women in each of the three groups was 28.5 (6.0), 31.2 (4.6), and 31.6 (4.7) years for the intact, tear, and episiotomy groups, respectively. There was little difference in height among the groups, but women in the intact group seemed to be somewhat heavier than the other women. The intact group was more ethnically diverse (roughly 30% non-white) than the tear (20% non-white) and episiotomy (10% non-white) groups. The tear and the episiotomy groups were similarly educated and somewhat more so than the intact group.
The average infant birth weight in the episiotomy group was higher than in the tear group (t test P=0.01), but birth weight in the tear group was not significantly higher than in the intact group (P=0.09). We observed that the second stage of labour was shortest for women with an intact perineum and longest for women who underwent an episiotomy. Of births in the episiotomy group, 27% were aided by instrumentation, either forceps or vacuum extractor, while less than 10% of births in the other categories involved the use of these instruments. Less than 20% of births in the intact and tear groups involved a complication of labour compared with one quarter of births in the episiotomy group.
Table 2 presents the overall risk of faecal and flatus incontinence at three and six months postpartum for the three main groups, as well as for subgroups of interest. About 10% of women with episiotomies were experiencing faecal incontinence three months after giving birth. Women in the tear group and the intact group had less than half that risk. Within the tear group the risk of faecal incontinence was similar for second degree (3.3%) versus third or fourth degree laceration (4.0%) at three months postpartum. For most groups the prevalence of faecal incontinence at six months postpartum was about half that reported at three months postpartum.
|
|
One third of women in the episiotomy group reported experiencing flatus incontinence at three months postpartum, and nearly one quarter reported this condition at six months postpartum (table 2). In contrast, the prevalence of flatus incontinence among women not receiving episiotomies was about 20% at three months and 10-13% at six months postpartum. The prevalence of flatus incontinence at both time periods was similar for all degrees of spontaneous tearing.
After adjustment for maternal age, infant birth weight, and duration of the second stage of labour women who had an episiotomy were more likely to experience anal incontinence than women who did not (table 3). With the exception of faecal incontinence at six months postpartum the risk of all other outcomes was significantly greater among the episiotomy group than among the tear group. Women in the tear group were no more likely to experience anal incontinence than women in the intact group. Further adjustment for body size (by using weight, height, or body mass index), education, and ethnic group did not result in any change to the relative risk estimates.
To eliminate the possibility that use of obstetric instrumentation or other complications of labour were confounding the association between episiotomy and risk of anal incontinence we repeated our analysis in the subset of women who had a spontaneous, non-instrumental birth with no documented complications of labour (table 3). Although with a loss of power, we found that the effect of episiotomy was not influenced by its association with operative or complicated deliveries.
Table 4 shows a comparison of the risk of anal incontinence for the 152 women who had a non-extending episiotomy and the 156 women who had a second degree spontaneous perineal tear. Relative to women with a second degree tear, a non-extending episiotomy tripled the risk of faecal incontinence at three months postpartum and doubled this risk at six months postpartum, although these results were not significant. The risk of flatus incontinence was marginally significantly higher for women with non-extending episiotomies compared with women with second degree tearing. Again, further restriction to uncomplicated births resulted in loss of statistical precision but not in a qualitative or quantitative change in the findings.
|
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Mechanical damage to the external or internal anal sphincter muscles or impairment of innervation to the sphincter, or both, resulting from obstetrical trauma are thought to be the principal causes of anal incontinence in women. 2 6 11 19 20 Sphincter defects acquired during childbirth could be permanent as some investigators have observed no changes in these defects from six weeks to six months postpartum and have noted that the prevalence of occult defects in primiparas after giving birth is the same as the prevalence of defects in multiparas before giving birth.2 We did note diminished reporting of symptoms of incontinence over time, though we cannot extend our interpretation beyond six months postpartum.
Episiotomy and sphincter defects
Overt injury to the sphincter through high degree perineal
tearing can occur as a result of a spontaneous laceration or from the
extension of an episiotomy and is readily apparent to the clinician.
The increasing use of anal endosonography in clinical studies, however,
has established that underlying sphincter damage can be present despite
the appearance of a normal perineum.
20 21
Our study
provides evidence that midline episiotomy increases the risk of
postpartum anal incontinence, presumably by causing such occult
sphincter trauma. We have shown that, independent of its association
with instrumentation, labour complications, high birth weight, and long
second stage of labour, midline episiotomy is associated with an
increased risk of anal incontinence. Our findings are supported by the
work of Sultan et al, who observed that 41% (9/22) of women receiving
episiotomies during a non-instrumental delivery had occult
sphincter defects detectable on anal endosonography, a proportion
higher than that observed for women who did not receive episiotomies.2 In the same study, these investigators
reported that 35% of primiparous women had postpartum sphincter damage on endosonography (only 3% of whom were clinically apparent) and that
the internal sphincter was more often damaged than the external sphincter. Thus, although it is obvious that tearing that directly injures the sphincter is likely to compromise its function, attempts to
identify predictors of anal incontinence, and thus possible preventive
modalities, should look beyond high degree tears.
Methodological strengths and limitations
We cannot rule out misclassification as a possible explanation for
our finding concerning non-extending episiotomies as the possibility
exists that some of these episiotomies extended to a third degree tear
but were not correctly classified by the doctor or midwife. This is an
unlikely scenario, however, as a third degree tear is a prominent
obstetric event that requires a more complicated repair procedure. In
addition, there is little reason to suspect that such misclassification
occurred only for episiotomies and not for second degree spontaneous tears.
|
What is already known on this subject
Most anal incontinence in women is thought to arise from injury to the sphincter during childbirth Operative vaginal deliveries and high degree perineal tears have been implicated in the disruption of sphincter function, but no study to date has been designed specifically to quantify the effect of episiotomy and varying levels of spontaneous perineal trauma on symptoms of anal incontinence What this study addsMidline episiotomy is a risk factor for postpartum anal incontinence, independent of the procedure's association with maternal age, infant birth weight, duration of the second stage of labour, complications of labour, and obstetric instrumentation Women with appreciable spontaneous perineal tearing are at lower risk of postpartum anal incontinence than women who have midline episiotomies |
Conclusions
Our study raises concern about the efficacy of midline
episiotomy in protecting the perineum and sphincters during childbirth
and, moreover, implicates this procedure in the impairment of anal
continence. For most end points in this study women who were given
midline episiotomies were at a significantly higher risk than women who
sustained spontaneous lacerations. Restriction of midline episiotomies
to certain necessary indications
4 13 14
is reasonable in
light of the procedure's documented association with high degree
perineal tearing
6 15-18
and now evidence of a potential
role in postpartum anal incontinence, independent of overt anorectal injury.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
Contributors: LBS had the original idea for the study. The protocol was developed by LBS, BLH, and JTR. Data collection, medical record abstraction, day to day study management, data entry, and data cleaning were managed by LBS and AKC. Statistical analyses were performed by LBS and BLH. All authors contributed to the interpretation of the results, as well as to the writing and editing of the manuscript. LBS and BLH are the guarantors for the paper.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Funding: Brigham and Women's Hospital Obstetrics and Gynecology Foundation.
Competing interests: None declared.
| |
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| 1. | MacArthur C, Bick DE, Keighley MRB. Faecal incontinence after childbirth. Br J Obstet Gynaecol 1997; 104: 46-50[Medline]. |
| 2. |
Sultan AH, Kamm MA, Hudson CN, Thomas JM, Bartram CI.
Anal sphincter disruption during vaginal delivery.
N Engl J Med
1993;
329:
1905-1911 |
| 3. | Leigh RJ, Turnberg LA. Faecal incontinence: the unvoiced symptom. Lancet 1982; i: 1349-1351. |
| 4. | Sultan AH, Kamm MA. Faecal incontinence after childbirth. Br J Obstet Gynaecol 1997; 104: 979-982[Medline]. |
| 5. |
Isager-Sally L, Legarth J, Jacobsen B, Bostofte E.
Episiotomy repair immediate and long-term sequelae. A prospective randomised study of three different methods of repair.
Br J Obstet Gynaecol
1986;
93:
420-425[Medline].
|
| 6. |
Sultan AH, Kamm MA, Hudson CN, Bartram CI.
Third degree obstetric anal sphincter tears: risk factors and outcome of primary repair.
BMJ
1994;
308:
887-891 |
| 7. | Nielsen MB, Hauge C, Rasmussen OO, Pedersen JF, Christiansen J. Anal endosonographic findings in the follow-up of primarily sutured sphincteric ruptures. Br J Surg 1992; 79: 104-106[Medline]. |
| 8. | Sorensen M, Tetzschner T, Rasmussen OO, Bjarnesen J, Christiansen J. Sphincter rupture in childbirth. Br J Surg 1993; 80: 392-394[Medline]. |
| 9. | Swash M. Faecal incontinence. Childbirth is responsible for most cases. BMJ 1993; 307: 636-637. |
| 10. | Snooks SJ, Swash M, Mathers SE, Henry MM. Effect of vaginal delivery on the pelvic floor: a 5-year follow-up. Br J Surg 1990; 77: 1358-1360[Medline]. |
| 11. |
Deen KI, Kumar D, Williams JG, Olliff J, Keighley MRB.
The prevalence of anal sphincter defects in faecal incontinence: a prospective endosonic study.
Gut
1993;
34:
685-688 |
| 12. | Sultan AH, Kamm MA, Bartram CI, Hudson CN. Anal sphincter trauma during instrumental delivery. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1993; 43: 263-270[Medline]. |
| 13. | Thacker SB, Banta HD. Benefits and risks of episiotomy: an interpretive review of the English language literature, 1860-1980. Obstet Gynecol Surv 1983; 38: 322-338[Medline]. |
| 14. | Thorp Jr JM, Bowes Jr WA. Episiotomy: can its routine use be defended? Am J Obstet Gynecol 1989; 160: 1027-1030[Medline]. |
| 15. |
Thorp Jr JM, Bowes Jr WA, Brame RG, Cefalo R.
Selected use of midline episiotomy: effect on perineal trauma.
Obstet Gynecol
1987;
70:
260-262 |
| 16. |
Helwig JT, Thorp Jr JM, Bowes Jr WA.
Does midline episiotomy increase the risk of third- and fourth-degree lacerations in operative vaginal deliveries?
Obstet Gynecol
1993;
82:
276-279 |
| 17. |
Walker MPR, Farine D, Rolbin SH, Ritchie JWK.
Epidural anesthesia, episiotomy, and obstetric laceration.
Obstet Gynecol
1991;
77:
668-671 |
| 18. | Klein MC, Gauthier RJ, Robbins JM, Kaczorowski J, Jorgensen SH, Franco ED, et al. Relationship of episiotomy to perineal trauma and morbidity, sexual dysfunction, and pelvic floor relaxation. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1994; 171: 591-598[Medline]. |
| 19. | Snooks SJ, Swash M, Setchell M, Henry MM. Injury to innervation of pelvic floor sphincter musculature in childbirth. Lancet 1984; 2: 546-550[Medline]. |
| 20. | Burnett SJD, Spence-Jones C, Speakman CTM, Kamm MA, Hudson CN, Bartram CIB. Unsuspected sphincter damage following childbirth revealed by anal endosonography. Br J Radiol 1991; 64: 225-227[Abstract]. |
| 21. | Frudinger A, Bartram CI, Spencer JAD, Kamm MA. Perineal examination as a predictor of underlying external anal sphincter damage. Br J Obstet Gynaecol 1997; 104: 1009-1013[Medline]. |
(Accepted 1 November 1999)
Read all Rapid Responses
What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+