Karen Telford
University of Manchester
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Karen Telford.
BMC Surgery | 2007
Benjamin R. Grey; Rowena R Sheldon; Karen Telford; Edward S. Kiff
BackgroundEarly surgical results of anterior sphincter repair for faecal incontinence can be good, but in the longer term are often disappointing. This study aimed to determine the short and long term outcomes from anterior sphincter repair and identify factors predictive of long term success.MethodsPatients who underwent anterior sphincter repair between 1989 and 2001 in one institution were identified. Postal questionnaires were sent to patients, which included validated scoring systems for symptom severity and quality of life assessments for faecal incontinence. Patient demographics and risk factors were recorded as were the results of anorectal physiology studies and endoanal ultrasound.ResultsEighty-five patients underwent repair by one consultant. The length of follow up ranged from 1 to 12 years. Most patients (96%) had early symptom improvement postoperatively. Of the 47 patients assessed long term (≥ 5 years), 28 (60%) maintained this success. Significant improvements in quality of life were observed (P < 0.001). Neither patient, surgical nor anorectal physiology study parameters were predictive of outcome.ConclusionThere were no predictive factors of outcome success and no changes in anal manometry identified, however anterior sphincter repair remains worthwhile. Changes in compliance of the anorectum may be responsible for symptom improvement.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2004
Karen Telford; A. S. M. Ali; K. Lymer; Gordon L. Hosker; Edward S. Kiff; Jonathan Hill
INTRODUCTIONAnal incontinence commonly results from external anal sphincter dysfunction. The muscle is routinely assessed by anorectal physiology studies. Fatigability is not routinely measured but should be an important factor in the maintenance of continence. The fatigue rate index has been developed to address this. The purpose of this study was to investigate the fatigability of the external anal sphincter in incontinent patients compared with that in controls and to determine its correlation with symptom severity and pudendal nerve terminal motor latency measurement.METHODSForty-two patients with anal incontinence (33 female, 9 male) and 20 control patients (17 female, 3 male) were studied. As part of anorectal physiology studies, manometry was measured by a station pull-through technique with a closed-system microballoon. After a rest period of one minute, fatigue was measured over a 20-second squeeze at 1.5 cm in the anal canal with two consecutive readings separated by a further one-minute rest period. The fatigue rate index was calculated from the maximum squeeze pressure and fatigue rate. A validated symptom severity scoring system was used to assess symptomatology in patients with anal incontinence.RESULTSNo difference was detected in demographic factors between the two groups. The fatigue rate index was significantly different between the control and incontinent groups (1.85 vs. 0.67 minutes, P = 0.001). No other factors were significantly different between the two groups (maximum squeeze pressure, 89.1 vs. 79 cm H2O, P = 0.42; fatigue rate, −85.8 vs. −101.2 cm H2O/min, P = 0.62). The fatigue rate index demonstrated a significant correlation with symptom score (r = −0.44, P = 0.005). The fatigue rate index did not correlate with latency measurement.CONCLUSIONsA significant difference was detected in the fatigue rate index between incontinent and control patients. The Fatigue Rate Index demonstrated a significant correlation with symptom severity score and it may be a useful discriminating measure of external anal sphincter function.
Colorectal Disease | 2011
P. J. Mitchell; K. R. Cattle; S. Saravanathan; Karen Telford; Edward S. Kiff
Aim The aim of this study was to determine whether temporary electrode implantation under local anaesthesia (LA), with reliance on sensory response rather than motor response, gives as good a result as implantation under general anaesthesia (GA).
Colorectal Disease | 2004
Karen Telford; G. Faulkner; Gordon L. Hosker; Edward S. Kiff; Jonathan Hill
Objective The Strength‐duration test (SDT) is a simple minimally invasive measure of muscle innervation, recently adapted for the assessment of the external anal sphincter (EAS). This test can discriminate women with faecal incontinence from controls. The purpose of this study was to determine if the SDT could detect denervation of the EAS in women with weak but anatomically intact EAS and normal pudendal nerve terminal motor latency (PNTML).
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2011
Peter J. Mitchell; Niels Klarskov; Karen Telford; Gordon L. Hosker; Gunnar Lose; Edward S. Kiff
BACKGROUND: Anal acoustic reflectometry is a new technique of assessing anal sphincter function. Five new variables reflecting anal canal function are measured: the opening and closing pressure, the opening and closing elastance, and hysteresis. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to compare the reproducibility of this new technique, in terms of test-retest and interrater reliability, with manometry, the current standard test of sphincter function. DESIGN: This is a comparative study of reproducibility between anal acoustic reflectometry and manometry. SETTINGS: This study was conducted at a university hospital (outpatient clinic and endoscopy unit). PATIENTS: Twenty-six (21 female) subjects were assessed with both anal acoustic reflectometry and manometry on 2 separate occasions (test-retest reliability) and 22 (16 female) subjects were assessed with both methods by 2 separate investigators (interrater reliability). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Reproducibility was assessed according to the Bland-Altman method. RESULTS: All of the measured novel anal acoustic reflectometry parameters had acceptable mean differences and repeatability coefficients. Comparison of the 2 methods of sphincter assessment (anal acoustic reflectometry vs manometry) was made for measurements taken at rest and during voluntary contraction. There was no significant difference in terms of test-retest reliability between the manometry maximum resting pressure vs the reflectometry opening pressure (P = .57) or manometry maximum squeeze pressure vs the reflectometry squeeze opening pressure (P = .68). No significant difference between methods was found in interrater reliability during assessments at rest (P = .62) and voluntary contraction (P = .96). LIMITATIONS: Anal acoustic reflectometry is limited, as with all tests of anorectal function, in that the device is placed within the anal canal, causing stimulation of sensory and stretch receptors. CONCLUSIONS: Anal acoustic reflectometry has a reproducibility comparable to manometry in terms of both test-retest and interrater reliability. Anal acoustic reflectometry is a promising technique that allows an assessment of anal canal physiology that is not available with manometry.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2012
Peter J. Mitchell; Niels Klarskov; Karen Telford; Gordon L. Hosker; Gunnar Lose; Edward S. Kiff
BACKGROUND: Anal acoustic reflectometry is a new reproducible technique that allows a viscoelastic assessment of anal canal function. Five new variables reflecting anal canal function are measured: the opening and closing pressure, opening and closing elastance, and hysteresis. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess whether the parameters measured in anal acoustic reflectometry are clinically valid between continent and fecally incontinent subjects. DESIGN: This was an age- and sex-matched study of continent and incontinent women. SETTING: The study was conducted at a university teaching hospital. PATIENTS: One hundred women (50 with fecal incontinence and 50 with normal bowel control) were included in the study. Subjects were age matched to within 5 years. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Parameters measured with anal acoustic reflectometry and manometry were compared between incontinent and continent groups using a paired t test. Diagnostic accuracy was assessed by the use of receiver operator characteristic curves. RESULTS: Four of the 5 anal acoustic reflectometry parameters at rest were significantly different between continent and incontinent women (eg, opening pressure in fecally incontinent subjects was 31.6 vs 51.5 cm H2O in continent subjects, p = 0.0001). Both anal acoustic reflectometry parameters of squeeze opening pressure and squeeze opening elastance were significantly reduced in the incontinent women compared with continent women (50 vs 99.1 cm H2O, p = 0.0001 and 1.48 vs 1.83 cm H2O/mm2, p = 0.012). In terms of diagnostic accuracy, opening pressure at rest measured by reflectometry was significantly superior in discriminating between continent and incontinent women in comparison with resting pressure measured with manometry (p = 0.009). CONCLUSIONS: Anal acoustic reflectometry is a new, clinically valid technique in the assessment of continent and incontinent subjects. This technique, which assesses the response of the anal canal to distension and relaxation, provides a detailed viscoelastic assessment of anal canal function. This technique may not only aid the investigation of fecally incontinent subjects, but it may also improve our understanding of anal canal physiology during both the process of defecation and maintenance of continence.
Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology | 2014
Hudhaifah Shaker; Edward J. Maile; Karen Telford
This structured case report is a brief case report describing an episode of complete circumferential rectal ulceration and haemorrhage secondary to the use of a faecal management system. An elderly lady was admitted for elective cardiac surgery. Prior to admission, the patient was taking warfarin in view of her atrial fibrillation. Following surgery, the patient developed faecal incontinence, which was managed with a faecal management system. However, the patient subsequently developed massive rectal haemorrhage from an area of complete circumferential ulceration in the rectum. This ulceration resulted from pressure necrosis secondary to the faecal management system balloon placed in the patient’s rectum. The implication for care is that faecal management systems are an important adjunct in the management of faecal incontinence, but caution must be exercised with prolonged use, particularly in anticoagulated patients.
Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology | 2018
Nick A. Heywood; James S. Pearson; James Nicholson; Clare Molyneux; Abhiram Sharma; Edward S. Kiff; Peter J. Whorwell; Karen Telford
Background: Posterior tibial nerve stimulation (PTNS) is a novel treatment for patients with faecal incontinence (FI) and may be effective in selected patients; however, its mechanism of action is unknown. We sought to determine the effects of PTNS on anorectal physiological parameters. Methods: Fifty patients with FI underwent 30 min of PTNS treatment, weekly for 12 weeks. High-resolution anorectal manometry, bowel diaries and Vaizey questionnaires were performed before and after treatment. Successful treatment was determined as a greater than 50% reduction in FI episodes. Results: Fifty patients with FI were studied; 39 women, median age 62 years (range 30–82). Compared with pretreatment, there were reductions in episodes of urgency (16.0 versus 11.4, p = 0.006), overall FI (14.5 versus 9.1, p = 0.001), urge FI (5.4 versus 3.2, p = 0.016) and passive FI (9.1 versus 5.9, p = 0.008). Vaizey score was reduced (16.1 versus 14.5, p = 0.002). Rectal sensory volumes (ml) decreased (onset 40.3 versus 32.6, p = 0.014, call 75.7 versus 57.5, p < 0.001, urge 104.1 versus 87.4, p = 0.004). There was no significant change in anal canal pressures (mmHg) (maximum resting pressure 41.4 versus 44.2, p = 0.39, maximum squeeze pressure, 78.7 versus 88.2, p = 0.15, incremental squeeze pressure 37.2 versus 44.1, p = 0.22). Reduction in FI episodes did not correlate with changes in physiological parameters (p > 0.05). Treatment success of 44% was independent of changes in manometric parameters (p > 0.05). Conclusions: PTNS has a measureable physiological effect on rectal sensory volumes without an effect on anal canal pressures. It also reduces FI episodes; however, this effect is independent of changing physiology, suggesting that PTNS has a complex mechanism of action.
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2017
Benjamin R Hornung; Karen Telford; Gordon L. Carlson; Peter J. Mitchell; Niels Klarskov; Edward S. Kiff
BACKGROUND: Men with passive fecal leakage represent a distinct clinical entity in which the pathophysiology remains unclear. Standard anorectal investigations fail to demonstrate consistent abnormalities in this group. Anal acoustic reflectometry is a new test of anal sphincter function with greater sensitivity and discriminatory ability than conventional anal manometry. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine whether men with fecal leakage have an abnormality in anal sphincter function that is detectable by anal acoustic reflectometry. DESIGN: This was an age-matched study of continent and incontinent men. SETTINGS: The study was conducted at a university teaching hospital. PATIENTS: Male patients with isolated symptoms of fecal leakage were recruited. Anal acoustic reflectometry, followed by conventional anal manometry, was performed. Results were then compared with those from an age-matched group of men with no symptoms of anal incontinence or anorectal pathology. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Variables measured with anal acoustic reflectometry and anal manometry in the incontinent and continent men were compared. RESULTS: Thirty subjects were recruited, of whom 15 were men with fecal leakage and 15 were continent men. There was a significantly higher incidence of previous anorectal surgery in the men with leakage. The anal acoustic reflectometry variables of opening and closing pressure were significantly lower in leakers compared with continent subjects (p = 0.003 and p = 0.001). Hysteresis was significantly greater in the male leaker group (p = 0.026). No difference was seen in anal manometry. LIMITATIONS: With a larger sample size, the effect of previous anorectal surgery and the presence of an anal sphincter defect could be clarified. CONCLUSIONS: Anal acoustic reflectometry is a sensitive test of anal sphincter function and, unlike anal manometry, can discriminate male leakers from continent subjects. An identifiable abnormality has been detected using anal acoustic reflectometry, which may further our understanding of the pathogenesis in this group.
International Journal of Colorectal Disease | 2016
M. Zeiton; Sara Faily; James Nicholson; Karen Telford; Abhiram Sharma