| Literature DB >> 23902791 |
Maria Antonietta Mazzei1, Nevada Cioffi Squitieri, Susanna Guerrini, Amato Antonio Stabile Ianora, Lucio Cagini, Luca Macarini, Melchiore Giganti, Luca Volterrani.
Abstract
Acute diverticulitis (AD) results from inflammation of a colonic diverticulum. It is the most common cause of acute left lower-quadrant pain in adults and represents a common reason for acute hospitalization, as it affects over half of the population over 65 years with a prevalence that increases with age. Although 85% of colonic diverticulitis will recover with a nonoperative treatment, some patients may have complications such as abscesses, fistulas, obstruction, and /or perforation at presentation. For these reasons, different classifications were introduced through times to help clinicians to develop a correct diagnosis and guide the treatment and for the same reasons imaging is used in most cases both to realise a differential diagnosis and to guide the therapeutic management. US and CT are both usefull in diagnosis of diverticolitis, and their sensibility and specificity are similar. However CT scanning is essential for investigating complicated diverticular disease especially where there are diffuse signs and clinical suspicion of secondary peritonitis; instead in most uncomplicated cases the experienced sonographer may quickly confirm a diagnosis guided by the clinical signs. US is to be recommended in premenopausal women, and in young people to reduce dose exposure.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23902791 PMCID: PMC3711739 DOI: 10.1186/2036-7902-5-S1-S5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Ultrasound J ISSN: 2036-3176
Possible alternative diagnosis of Left Lower-Quadrant Pain.
| Gastrointestinal | Genitourinary/gynecologic | Vascular/Other |
|---|---|---|
| Epiploic appendagitis | Ureterolithiasis | Dissection/ruptured aneurysm |
| Ischemic colitis | Urinary tract infection | Abdominal wall abscess |
| Infectious enterocolitis | Ectopic pregnancy | Abdominal wall hematoma |
| Perforated carcinoma | Hemorrhagic or rupture ovarian cyst | Psoas abscess |
| Small bowel obstruction | Ovarian torsion | Retroperitoneal hemorrhage |
| Inflammatory bowel disease | Ruptured corpus luteum | |
| Appendicitis | Uterine fibroids torsion | |
| Small bowel infarction | Pelvic Inflammatory disease | |
| Omental infarction | ||
| Incarcerated hernia |
Hinchey classification and modified Hinchey classification by Sher et al.
| Hinchey classification | Modified Hinchey classification by Sher et al |
|---|---|
| I pericolic abscess or phlegmon | I pericolic abscess |
| II pelvic, intrabdominal or retroperitoneal abscess | IIa distant abscess amendable to percutaneous drainage |
| IIb Complex absess associated with fistula | |
| III Generalized purulent peritonitis | III Generalized purulent peritonitis |
| IV Generalized fecal peritonitis | IV Fecal peritonitis |
Köhler and Hansen/Stock classification.
| Köhler Classification | Hansen/Stock classification |
|---|---|
| Symptomatic uncomplicated disease | 0 Diverticulosis |
| Recurrent symptomatic disease | I Acute uncomplicated diverticulitis |
| Complicated disease: | II Acute complicated diverticulitis |
| Hemorrhage, Abscess, Phlegmon | a. Phlegmon, peridiverticulitis |
| Fistula, Perforation, Stricture | b. Abscess, sealed perforation |
| Purulent and fecal peritonitis, Small bowel | c. Free perforation |
| obstruction due to post-inflammatory adhesions | III Chronic recurrent diverticulitis |
Figure 1Contrast-enhanced MDCT 2D reconstruction on axial –oblique (a) and coronal oblique (b) planes shows a neoplastic thickening of the colonic wall (sigmoid tract) in presence of diverticulitisis.
Figure 2Sonographic features of uncomplicated diverticulitis: diverticula appear as bright “ear” out of the bowel wall (a); a central shadowing echogenicity may indicate the presence of fecalith (b).
Figure 3Sonographic features of complicated diverticulitis: the images show the presence of diveticula, thickening of the bowel wall and pericolic fluid (a,b)