Anal Fissures
Overview:
- Common cause of anal pain and bleeding 
- Incidence is about 8%. 
Cause:
Anal fissures typically start with a tear from trauma.
Cycle of recurring anal pain, tear, and bleeding, leading to a chronic anal fissure in as many as 40% of patients.
Lack of blood flow may contribute and the most common location of primary fissures is the posterior midline (at 6 o’clock position if lying on your back)
Diagnosis
Based on clinical history. Visualising the fissure is not necessary for diagnosis. A digital anal examination is almost never performed due to acute pain.
Differential Diagnoses
Haemorrhoids - Uncomplicated haemorrhoids typically do not cause pain
Perianal ulcers - Can be seen in Crohn’s Disease or STDs
Anal Fistula - Typically presents as a draining skin punctum with a hole that tracks down through the skin towards the anorectum.
Risk factors:
Most anal fissures are primary caused by local trauma such as
- Constipation 
- Diarrhoea 
- Vaginal delivery 
- Anal sex 
Secondary causes are due to an underlying disease such as
- Crohn’s disease 
- Tuberculosis 
- Sarcoidosis 
- Cancers 
- Sexual Transmitted Infections such as HIV, Chlamydia or syphilis 
Symptoms:
Acute anal fissures have symptoms for < 8 weeks. Chronic anal fissures last longer.
- Anal pain present at rest 
- Exacerbated by defecation, often severe 
- Pain that intensifies with defecation often last hours after 
- Can be anal bleeding 
Examination
Anal fissures are commonly present as longitudinal tears in the anus
An acute tear appears fresh like a superficial laceration, much like a paper cut
Chronic fissures have raised edges exposing the white horizontally fibres of the internal anal sphincter muscle at the base.
Management
Initial medical therapy is 4 to 8 weeks of
- Increased fibre - Recommended intake 20g to 35g per day 
 
- Sitz bath 2 to 3 times daily - Sitting in warm water for 10 to 15 minutes 
- This stimulates blood flow to the perineum allowing it to heal 
 
- Stool softeners if constipated 
- Twice daily topical vasodilator - Glyceryl Trinitrate 0.4% or Nifedipine 0.2-0.3%. 
- Nifedipine needs to be compounded but has less side effects and can be used up to 4 times daily. One study showed healing rates for Nifedpine versus GTN were 89% versus 58% and fewer side effects at 5% versus 40%. 
 
Topical anaesthetic agents don’t improve outcomes but can help pain short-term. It’s possible to get a compounding pharmacist to make a local anaesthetic and vasodilator combination.
If medical therapy fails then the next steps are either Botox injection or a lateral sphincterotomy.
Rates of success for surgery versus medicine were 96 vs 67% at 5 weeks and 100 versus 89% at 10 weeks. Both were combined with sitz baths and fibre-bulking agents. The downside to surgery was increased rates of faecal incontinence with over 15% of patients still having problems at 2 years post-surgery.
References
- Pisaster brevispinus - Wikipedia 
- Medical Management of Anal Fissures - Up To Date 
- Surgical Management of Anal Fissures - Up To Date 
