Malone antegrade continence enema


A Malone antegrade continence enema is a surgical procedure used to create a continent pathway proximal to the anus that facilitates fecal evacuation using enemas.

Description

The operation involves connecting the appendix to the abdominal wall and fashioning a valve mechanism that allows catheterization of the appendix, but avoids leakage of stool through it. If the appendix was previously removed or is unusable, a neoappendix can be created with a cecal flap.

Indications

It is done to treat fecal incontinence unresponsive to treatment with medications. It is frequently done with a procedure to treat urinary incontinence as the two often co-exist, such as in spina bifida.

Cecostomy tube alternative

A percutaneous cecostomy tube is an alternative to a MACE. It involves the surgical insertion of a catheter into the cecum for the same goal. Percutaneous cecostomy procedures, like MACEs, have been performed laparoscopically.

Eponym

The procedure is named after the surgeon Padraig Malone who helped popularized it in the 1990s and described it with co-authors as the antegrade continence enema procedure.