Anal fistula differential diagnosis

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1], Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Manpreet Kaur, MD [2]


Overview

Anal fistula must be differentiated from other causes of anal pain including anal fissure, thrombosed hemorrhoids, levator spasm, sexually transmitted disease, proctitis, hidradenitis suppurativa, infected skin furuncles, herpes simplex virus, tuberculosis, syphilis, actinomycosis and cancer.

Differentiating Anal fistula from Other Diseases

Anal fistula must be differentiated from other causes of anal pain, including anal fissure, thrombosed hemorrhoids, levator spasm, sexually transmitted disease, proctitis, hidradenitis suppurativa, infected skin furuncles, herpes simplex virus, tuberculosis, syphilis, actinomycosis and cancer.[1]

Disease Definition Causes Clinical Features Diagnosis
Anal fistula
Anal Fissure
  • Clinical diagnosis
Thrombosed external hemorrhoids
  • Engorged fibrovascular cushions lining the anal canal
  • Clinical diagnosis
Levator spasm
  • Seen in patients with perfectionistic, anxious somatic, and/or neurotic tendencies
  • Severe anal pain lasting for seconds to 5 minutes
  • Diagnosis is by Rome IV criteria
  • It is diagnosis of exlusion
Proctitis
Hidradenitis suppurativa
  • Causes unidentified
Infected skin furuncle
  • Well-circumscribed, painful, suppurative inflammatory nodule involving hair follicles
  • Clinical diagnosis
Bartholin's abscess

References

  1. Adikrisna R, Udagawa M, Sugita Y, Ishii T, Okamoto H, Yabata E (2015). "[A Case of Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Anal Canal with a Perianal Abscess]". Gan To Kagaku Ryoho. 42 (12): 2322–4. PMID 26805351.

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