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Fistula 2/2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fistula reference science, encyclopedia 2026-05-05T07:13:45.159599+00:00 kb-cron

=== N: Diseases of the urogenital system === (N32.1) Vesicointestinal fistula (N36.0) Urethral fistula Innora:between the prostatic utricle and the outside of the body (N64.0) Fistula of nipple (N82) Fistulae involving female genital tract / Obstetric fistula (N82.0) Vesicovaginal fistula: between the bladder and the vagina (N82.1) Other female urinary-genital tract fistulae Cervical fistula: abnormal opening in the cervix (N82.2) Fistula of vagina to small intestine Enterovaginal fistula: between the intestine and the vagina (N82.3) Fistula of vagina to large intestine Rectovaginal: between the rectum and the vagina (N82.4) Other female intestinal-genital tract fistulae (N82.5) Female genital tract-skin fistulae (N82.8) Other female genital tract fistulae (N82.9) Female genital tract fistula, unspecified

=== Q: Congenital malformations, deformations and chromosomal abnormalities === (Q18.0) Sinus, fistula and cyst of branchial cleft Congenital preauricular fistula: A small pit in front of the ear. Also known as an ear pit or preauricular sinus. (Q26.6) Portal vein-hepatic artery fistula (Q38.0) Congenital fistula of lip (Q38.4) Congenital fistula of salivary gland (Q42.0) Congenital absence, atresia and stenosis of rectum with fistula (Q42.2) Congenital absence, atresia and stenosis of anus with fistula (Q43.6) Congenital fistula of rectum and anus (Q51.7) Congenital fistulae between uterus and digestive and urinary tracts (Q52.2) Congenital rectovaginal fistula

=== T: External causes === (T14.5) Traumatic arteriovenous fistula (T81.8) Persistent postoperative fistula

== Causes == Disease: Infections including an anorectal abscess and inflammatory diseases including Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis can result in fistulas. Fistulas to the anus may occur in hidradenitis suppurativa. In women, fistulas can also occur following pelvic infection and inflammation.

Surgical and medical treatment: Complications from gallbladder surgery can lead to biliary fistulas. As well as being congenital or resulting from trauma, arteriovenous fistulas are created purposefully for hemodialysis. Radiation therapy to the pelvis can lead to vesicovaginal fistulas. Persistent gastrocutaneous fistulas can develop after gastrostomy. Trauma: Prolonged childbirth can lead to fistulas in women, in whom abnormal connections may occur between the bladder and vagina, or the rectum and vagina. An obstetric fistula develops when blood supply to the tissues of the vagina and the bladder (and/or rectum) is cut off during prolonged obstructed labor. The tissues die and a hole forms through which urine and/or feces pass uncontrollably. Vesicovaginal and rectovaginal fistulas may also be caused by rape, in particular gang rape, and rape with foreign objects, as evidenced by the abnormally high number of women in conflict areas who have developed fistulae. In 2003, thousands of women in eastern Congo presented themselves for treatment of traumatic fistulas caused by systematic, violent gang rape, often also with sharp objects that occurred during the country's five years of war. So many cases have been reported that the destruction of the vagina is considered a war injury and recorded by doctors as a crime of combat. Head trauma can lead to perilymph fistulas, whereas trauma to other parts of the body can cause arteriovenous fistulas.

== Treatment == Treatment for fistula varies depending on the cause and extent of the fistula, but often involves surgical intervention combined with antibiotic therapy. In some cases the fistula is temporarily covered, using a fibrin glue or plug. Catheters may be required to drain a fistula. Surgery is often required to assure adequate drainage of the fistula (so that pus may escape without forming an abscess). Various surgical procedures are used, most commonly fistulotomy, placement of a seton (a cord that is passed through the path of the fistula to keep it open for draining), or an endorectal flap procedure (where healthy tissue is pulled over the internal side of the fistula to keep feces or other material from reinfecting the channel). Management involves treating any underlying causative condition. For example, surgical treatment of fistulae in Crohn's disease can be effective, but if the Crohn's disease itself is not treated, the rate of recurrence of the fistula is very high (well above 50%).

== Therapeutic use == In people with kidney failure, requiring dialysis, a cimino fistula is often deliberately created in the arm by means of a short day surgery in order to permit easier withdrawal of blood for hemodialysis. As a radical treatment for portal hypertension, surgical creation of a portacaval fistula produces an anastomosis between the hepatic portal vein and the inferior vena cava across the omental foramen (of Winslow). This spares the portal venous system from high pressure which can cause esophageal varices, caput medusae, and hemorrhoids.

== Epidemiology == Globally, every year between 50,000 and 100,000 women are affected by fistula relating to childbirth.

== Botany == In botany, the term is most common in its adjectival forms, where it is used in binomial names to refer to species that are distinguished by hollow or tubular structures. Monarda fistulosa, for example, has tubular flowers; Eutrochium fistulosum has a tubular stem; Allium fistulosum has hollow or tubular leaves, and Acacia seyal subsp. fistula is the subspecies with hollow spines.

== Society and culture == The term was first used in the 14th century. A fistula plays a central role in William Shakespeare's play All's Well That Ends Well. An arteriovenous fistula is also a main plot point in Richard Fleischer's 1966 film Fantastic Voyage (screenplay by Harry Kleiner), sending the miniaturized submarine inside a patient's body on an unforeseen course.

== See also == Alexis St. Martin Canadian subject of digestion experiments (18021880) Fistulated cow M. Ijaiya's technique Surgical procedure to close juxtacervical vesicovaginal fistulae Obstetric fistula Stoma (medicine)

== References ==

== External links == Media related to Fistulae at Wikimedia Commons