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For further information, see CMDT Part 17-44: Other Anal Conditions: Fissures, Abscess, Pruritus
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Linear or rocket-shaped ulcers, usually < 5 mm
Most commonly occur in the posterior midline; 10% occur anteriorly
Arise from trauma during defecation
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Severe, tearing pain during defecation followed by throbbing discomfort
May lead to constipation because of fear of recurrent pain
Mild associated hematochezia
With chronic fissures, there is fibrosis and a skin tag at the outermost edge (sentinel pile)
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Diagnosis is confirmed by visual inspection of the anal verge while gently separating the buttocks
Digital and anoscopic examinations may cause severe pain so may not be possible
Fissures that occur off the midline suggest
Crohn disease
Syphilis
Tuberculosis
HIV/AIDS
Anal carcinoma
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Fiber supplements, stool softeners
Sitz baths
Topical anesthetics (5% lidocaine; 2.5% lidocaine plus 2.5% prilocaine) may provide temporary relief
Chronic fissures may be treated with
Topical 0.125–0.4% nitroglycerin or diltiazem 2% or nifedipine 0.5% ointment (1 cm of ointment) applied two or three times daily just inside anus with tip of finger for 4–8 weeks
Injection of botulinum toxin (20 units) into internal anal sphincter
These treatments result in healing in 60–90% of patients with chronic anal fissure, but headaches occur in up to 40% of patients treated with nitroglycerin
Botulinum toxin may cause transient anal incontinence
Lateral internal sphincterotomy is effective for chronic or recurrent fissures but may be complicated by minor fecal incontinence