| Literature DB >> 28638830 |
G Di Grezia1, G Gatta2, R Rella2, D Donatello2, G Falco3, R Grassi2, R Grassi2.
Abstract
Incidental gastrointestinal findings are commonly detected on MDCT exams performed for various medical indications. This review describes the radiological MDCT spectrum of appearances already present in the past literature and in today's experience of several gastrointestinal acute conditions such as abdominal hernia, giant colon diverticulum, GIST, intestinal pneumatosis, colon ischemia, cold intussusception, gallstone ileus, and foreign bodies which can require medical and surgical intervention or clinical follow-up. The clinical presentation of this illness is frequently nonspecific: abdominal pain, distension, nausea, fever, rectal bleeding, vomiting, constipation, or a palpable mass, depending on the disease. A proper differential diagnosis is essential in the assessment of treatment and in this case MDCT exam plays a central rule. We wish that this article will familiarize the radiologist in the diagnosis of this kind of incidental MDCT findings for better orientation of the therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28638830 PMCID: PMC5468579 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5716835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
MDCT mayor criteria in differential diagnosis of incidental gastrointestinal findings.
| Abdominal hernias | Internal |
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| Giant colon diverticulum | Cavity filled with gas, fluid, or stool, with a thin regular wall and no contrast enhancement except in the presence of inflammation; wall may contain calcifications in case of chronic inflammation |
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| Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) | Mass with a soft tissue density with central areas of lower density if necrosis is present and occasionally appear as fluid-fluid levels. Torricelli-Bernoulli sign. (PET) avid tumors |
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| Intestinal pneumatosis | Lung window is a low-density linear or bubbly pattern or combination of both and gas in the bowel wall. Abdominal CT scanning with or without contrast enhancement can show the morphology, distension, and thickness of bowel loops |
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| Colon ischemia | Bowel wall thickening (8 mm), thumb-printing, and pericolonic stranding with or without ascites |
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| Cold intussusception | Bowel-within-bowel and intestinal origin of underlying masses, the site and the intestinal tract involved, mesenteric vascular impairment, involvement of perivisceral fat, surrounding tissue, and locoregional lymph nodes |
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| Gallstone ileus | Ectopic gallstone, SBO, abnormal gall bladder with complete air collection, presence of air-fluid level, or fluid accumulation with irregular wall |
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| Foreign bodies | Shape, size, location, and depth of the impacted foreign body and the surrounding tissue can be visualized. IV contrast is not recommended |
Figure 1(a) Axial plane, (b) coronal reconstruction, (c, d) sagittal reconstruction of abdominal MDCT exam showing a case of internal hernia, a left side paraduodenal hernia (white arrow).
Figure 2(a, b) MDCT shows external left lumbar hernia (white arrow).
Figure 3(a) Axial plane and (b) sagittal reconstruction of abdominal MDCT exam showing a case of mixed paradiaphragmatic hernia (white arrow).
Figure 4(a) Coronal reconstruction, (b) axial plane, and (c) sagittal reconstruction of abdominal MDCT exam showing cases of gastric GIST (a, b), small bowel neoplasia (c) (white arrow), and postsurgical appearance of the lesions (d).
Figure 5MDCT exam shows small bowel parietal pneumatosis (white arrow).
Figure 6Colon ischemia axial images of MDCT showing bowel wall thickening corresponding to left colon (white arrow).
Figure 7Cold intussusception axial images of MDCT showing the bowel pulled inward into itself (white arrow).
Figure 8Axial images of MDCT show gallstone ileus (white arrow) in a typical location, the terminal ileum.
Figure 9Axial images of MDCT (a) show a foreign body in a small bowel loop (white arrow), also detected in abdominal ultrasonography (b).