Question 387
0
A 54-year-old female reports increased fecal incontinence. Her surgical history is significant for total abdominal hysterectomy. Physical examination suggests small partial thickness rectal prolapse. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) defecography suggests grade III intussusception and is also suggestive, but inconclusive, for the presence of enterocele. What is the best next step in evaluation for enterocele?
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Citation
"Question 387." CARSEP XII, ASCRS U, www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/CARSEP XII/3094387/7/Pelvic_Floor. Accessed 23 April 2026.
Question 387. CARSEP XII. https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/CARSEP XII/3094387/7/Pelvic_Floor. Accessed April 23, 2026.
Question 387. In CARSEP XII https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/CARSEP XII/3094387/7/Pelvic_Floor
Question 387 [Internet]. In: CARSEP XII. [cited 2026 April 23]. Available from: https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/CARSEP XII/3094387/7/Pelvic_Floor.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - ELEC
T1 - Question 387
ID - 3094387
BT - CARSEP XII
UR - https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/CARSEP XII/3094387/7/Pelvic_Floor
DB - ASCRS U
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -
CARSEP XII

