| Literature DB >> 20886031 |
Ramawad Soobrah1, Mohammad Badran, Simon G Smith.
Abstract
Segmental omental infarction (SOI) is a rare cause of acute abdominal pain. Depending on the site of infarction, it mimics conditions like appendicitis, cholecystitis, and diverticulitis. Before the widespread use of Computed Tomography (CT), the diagnosis was usually made intraoperatively. SOI produces characteristic radiological appearances on CT scan; hence, correct diagnosis using this form of imaging may prevent unnecessary surgery. We present the case of a young woman who was treated conservatively after accurate radiological diagnosis.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20886031 PMCID: PMC2945678 DOI: 10.1155/2010/765389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Figure 1Unenhanced CT images (a) coronal, (b) axial, (c) sagittal show a focal area of hyperattenuating omental fat stranding (arrows).
Classification of omental infarction [2, 8, 13].
| Torsion-related | Nontorsion-related (thrombosis) |
|---|---|
| – Primary (idiopathic) | – Spontaneous infarction |
| – Secondary to adhesions, hernias, or tumours | – Hypercoagulable states |
| – Vascular abnormality | |
| – Trauma |
Summary of patient demographics.
| Successful conservative management ( | Failed conservative management ( |
|---|---|
| [ | [ |
| Adults = 23 | Adults = 7 |
| Children = 7 | Children = 3 |
| Unknown = 24 | |
|
| |
| Male = 25 | Male = 7 |
| Female = 12 | Unknown = 3 |
| Unknown = 17 | |
|
| |
| Male average age = (739/19) = 39 years | Average age = (254/7) = 36 years |
| Female average age = (354/11) = 32 years | |