Dr. Antonio Privitera

Anal Fistula vs Abscess: What’s the Difference

Medical diagram comparing anal abscess as a pus-filled cavity and anal fistula as a chronic tract connecting the anal canal to the skin
Medical diagram comparing anal abscess as a pus-filled cavity and anal fistula as a chronic tract connecting the anal canal to the skin

Anal abscess and anal fistula are two stages of the same disease process. Understanding the relationship between them and the key differences in urgency, symptoms, and treatment is essential for getting the right care at the right time. Our anal fistula treatment in Dubai explains how fistulas, abscesses and related conditions are diagnosed and treated.

Anal Abscess: The Acute Stage

What It Is

A collection of pus in the tissue surrounding the anus and rectum, caused by infection of an anal gland. It is the ACUTE, painful, URGENT presentation.

Symptoms

  • Constant, severe, throbbing pain near the anus
  • Swelling, redness, and warmth
  • Fever – often present in deeper abscesses
  • Difficulty sitting
  • The pain is constant – not specifically related to bowel movements

Types of Abscess

  • Perianal (most common): Near the anal margin often visible as a tender swelling
  • Ischiorectal: In the ischiorectal fossa larger, deeper, more serious
  • Intersphincteric: Between the sphincters pain, minimal external swelling
  • Supralevator: Above the levator muscle deep, often with pelvic pain and fever

Treatment

Incision and drainage (I&D) – SURGICAL EMERGENCY. Do not wait. An anal abscess is a surgical emergency and requires immediate drainage. An abscess will not resolve with antibiotics alone. If untreated, it can spread to involve the entire perineum (Fournier’s gangrene life-threatening).

Important: In UAE, patients sometimes present to GPs who prescribe antibiotics alone for perianal abscess. This is inadequate. Drainage is required.

Medical illustration showing incision and drainage of an anal abscess to release pus and relieve infection
Anal abscesses require urgent surgical drainage—antibiotics alone are not sufficient.

Anal Fistula: The Chronic Stage

What It Is

A persistent tract (tunnel) from the site of the original anal gland infection to the perianal skin. It is the CHRONIC, persistent, non-urgent presentation but still requires definitive treatment.

Symptoms

  • Persistent or intermittent discharge (pus, blood, mucus) from an opening near the anus
  • Itching and skin irritation
  • Intermittent pain when the tract fills with pus and the external opening seals
  • History of previous abscess – either surgical drainage or spontaneous discharge

Treatment

Surgical – fistulotomy, seton placement, LIFT, laser, or other sphincter-sparing technique depending on the type and complexity of the fistula. For full management, see anal fistula treatment in Dubai. No cream or antibiotic will close a fistula.

The Relationship Between Abscess and Fistula

Think of them as two stages of the same disease: Abscess = active infection stage → Drain → 50% chance of fistula remaining → Fistula = chronic tract that persists.

Not all abscesses lead to fistulas. But approximately 50% do and patients who have had a perianal abscess drained should be aware of fistula symptoms.

Diagram showing progression from anal abscess formation to drainage and development of a chronic fistula tract
After an abscess drains, a persistent tract remains in up to 50% of cases, forming a fistula.

Key Differences at a Glance

  • Abscess: Acute, severe pain, swelling, fever. No external opening (or just the abscess itself).
  • Treatment: URGENT surgical drainage.
  • Fistula: Chronic, persistent discharge, itching, intermittent discomfort. External opening on perianal skin.
  • Treatment: Elective surgery.

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AUTHOR AUTHORITY BLOCK
All content on this page is written and reviewed by Prof. Dr. Antonio Privitera, consultant colorectal surgeon, with fellowship training at the Mayo Clinic (USA) and the Royal College of Surgeons (UK), and European Board Certification in Colorectal Surgery. Dr. Privitera practises across Dubai and Abu Dhabi and specialises in the full range of anorectal conditions including hemorrhoids, anal fissure, anal fistula, and colorectal cancer.

About the Author

Professor Dr Antonio Privitera
Consultant Colorectal & General Surgeon | Proctologist
FRCS (England)
FASCRS
MD
PhD
70+ Publications
Mayo Clinic Fellowship

Dr. Privitera is the only surgeon in the world with both a Mayo Clinic (Rochester, USA) and University of London Colorectal Surgery Fellowship. He completed an advanced laparoscopic and robotic fellowship in Seoul, South Korea.

He previously served as Lead Colorectal Surgeon at Tawam Hospital–Johns Hopkins Abu Dhabi and Associate Professor at UAE University.

He is a Fellow of the American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgery (FASCRS), Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of England (FRCS), and author of over 70 peer-reviewed publications. He also served as General Secretary of the Emirates Society of Colon and Rectal Surgery (2021–2024).

He practices across Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

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