At this point, Mayo Clinic is the only medical center that has surgically implanted this device, known as the Fenix Continence Restoration System. In December 2015, the system received
The issue of fecal incontinence, or accidental bowel leakage, is not unusual. It can affect more than 20 percent of women over 45, says Paul Pettit, M.D., a female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery specialist at Mayo Clinic. «The condition can be debilitating due to social isolation, depression, loss of
«If a patient does not improve through use of less invasive techniques, our only option has been a colostomy," says Dr. Pettit, who performed the four surgeries. «This device now offers a new option that restores function, and we are happy to be able to offer it.»
The operation itself lasts about 45 minutes and requires an overnight hospital stay.
Most patients with fecal incontinence — a syndrome that involves unintentional loss of solid or liquid stool — are women, and often the cause is childbirth, when the muscles and nerves near the anus are damaged, Dr. Pettit says.
When the system is implanted, the string of magnetic titanium beads is placed around the anal canal in the closed position. Increased
The device works immediately after surgery and does not require any activation by the patient or adjustments by a physician, according to the manufacturer, Torax Medical Inc., in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Mayo researchers and clinicians who worked with Dr. Pettit on clinical use of the system are Heidi Chua, M.D., Anita Chen, M.D., and Chris DeStephano, M.D., M.P.H.
Source: http://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/discussion/mayo-clinic-first-to-implant-device-to-solve-fecal-inco...