# Metallica chair does not spare the sphincter: successful operative reconstruction of an extraperitoneal rectal injury with sphincter involvement

**Authors:** Clement Rajakumar, Jainika Patel, Khea Tan, Glenn S Parker, Rachel Masia

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/jscr/rjag200 · 2026-03-29

## TL;DR

A 26-year-old man with a rectal injury from a metal chair was successfully treated with surgery without fecal diversion, showing this approach can work in select cases.

## Contribution

Demonstrates successful non-diverted surgical repair of an extraperitoneal rectal injury with sphincter involvement.

## Key findings

- An overlapping sphincteroplasty was performed without fecal diversion due to viable tissue and minimal contamination.
- The patient recovered uneventfully, supporting selective non-diverted management in similar cases.
- The injury involved the internal anal sphincter but preserved external sphincter function.

## Abstract

Extraperitoneal rectal injuries are uncommon and traditionally managed with fecal diversion, particularly when sphincter involvement is present. We report a case of a 26-year-old male who presented 5 days after a low-energy rectal impalement caused by a collapsed metal chair, with persistent rectal pain, fecal incontinence, and purulent drainage following initial repair at an outside institution. Examination under anesthesia revealed a posterior rectal laceration extending 6 cm from the anal verge, involving ~25% of the rectal circumference with disruption of the internal anal sphincter. After thorough debridement, an overlapping sphincteroplasty was performed without fecal diversion due to viable tissue, minimal contamination, preserved external sphincter function, and hemodynamic stability. The patient recovered uneventfully. This case highlights the feasibility of selective non-diverted management of extraperitoneal rectal trauma with sphincter involvement in carefully selected patients.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** rectal injuries (MESH:D012002), fecal incontinence (MESH:D005242), rectal pain (MESH:C563475)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13033155/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13033155