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Sigmoid Diverticular Disease. Yair Edden , MD Department of Surgery Shaare-Zedek Medical Center The Hebrew University School of Medicine Jerusalem, Israel . Nomenclature. Diverticulum = sac-like protrusion of the colonic wall Diverticulosis = describes the presence of diverticuli
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Sigmoid Diverticular Disease YairEdden, MD Department of Surgery Shaare-Zedek Medical Center The Hebrew University School of Medicine Jerusalem, Israel
Nomenclature Diverticulum = sac-like protrusion of the colonic wall Diverticulosis = describes the presence of diverticuli Diverticulitis = inflammation of diverticuli
Nomenclature True Diverticulum = all layers of the GI wall (mucosa to serosa)e.g. Appendix, Meckel, Congenital False/Pseudo Diverticulum = Mucosa-submucosa herniates through the muscle layer (muscularis propria) and then is only covered by serosae.g. Acquired pathology
Epidemiology- Sigmoid diverticulosis • Before the 20th century, diverticular disease was rare • Prevalence has increased over time • 1907 First reported resection of complicated diverticulitis by Mayo • 1925 5-10% • 1969 35-50%
Epidemiology- Sigmoid divericulosis Increases with age: • Age 40 <5% • Age 60 30% • Age 85 65% Younger patients are diagnosed frequently
Anatomic location of diverticuli varies with the geographic location “Westernized” nations have predominantly left sided diverticulosis • 95% diverticuli are in sigmoid colon • 35% can also have proximal diverticuli • 4% have only right sided diverticuli
Anatomic location of diverticuli varies with the geographic location Asia and Africa diverticulosis in general is rare and usually right sided • Prevalence < 0.2% • 70% diverticuli in right colon in Japan
Pathophysiology • Diverticuli develop in ‘weak’ regions of the colon. Specifically, local hernias develop where the vasa recta penetrate the bowel wall
Pathophysiology • Law of Laplace: • Pressure = K x Tension / Radius • Sigmoid colon has the smallest diameter resulting in highest pressure zone
Pathophysiology • Segmentation = motility process in which the segmental muscular contractions separate the lumen into chambers • Segmentation increased intraluminal pressure mucosal herniation Diverticulosis • May explain why high fiber prevents diverticuli by creating a larger diameter colon and less vigorous segmentation
Lifestyle factors associated with diverticular disease • Low fiber diverticular disease • Not absolutely proven in all studies but strongly suggested • Western diet is low in fiber with high prevalence of diverticulosis • In contrast, African diet is high in fiber with a low prevalence of diverticulosis
Lifestyle factors associated with diverticular disease • Obesity associated with diverticulosis – particularly in men under the age of 40 • Lack of physical activity
Lifestyle factors associated with diverticular disease • Do patients need to avoid foods with seeds or nuts?
Lifestyle factors associated with diverticular disease • NO!
A-symptomatic diverticulosis • Considered ‘a-symptomatic’ • However, some patients will complain of cramping, bloating, irregular BMs, narrow caliber stools • Confused with IBS • Recent studies demonstrate motility abnormalities in patients with ‘a-symptomatic’ uncomplicated diverticulosis
Diverticulitis • Diverticulitis = inflammation of diverticuli • Most common complication of diverticulosis • Occurs in 10-25% of patients with diverticulosis
Diverticulitis • Micro or macroscopic perforation of the diverticulum • Subclinical inflammation to generalized peritonitis • Previously thought to be due to fecaliths causing • increased diverticular pressure; this is really rare
Diverticulitis • Erosion of diverticular wall from increased • intraluminal pressure • Inflammation • Focal necrosis • Perforation • Usually inflammation is mild and microperforation is • walled off by peri-colonic fat and mesentery
Diagnosis of Diverticulitis • Classic history: increasing, constant, LLQ abdominal • pain over several days prior to presentation with fever • Crescendo quality – each day is worse • Constant – not colicky • Fever occurs in 57-100% of cases
Diagnosis of Diverticulitis • Previous episodes of similar pain • Associated symptoms • Nausea/vomiting 20-62% • Constipation 50% • Diarrhea 25-35% • Urinary symptoms (dysuria, urgency, frequency) 10-15%
Diagnosis of Diverticulitis • Diagnosis can be made with typical history and • examination • Radiographic confirmation (CT) is often… (100%) • performed • Rules out other causes of an acute abdomen • Determines severity of the diverticulitis
Simple vs. Complicated Diverticulitis • Complicated diverticulitis = Presence of • macroperforation, obstruction, abscess or fistula • Simple diverticulitis = Absence of the above • complications
Simple vs. Complicated Diverticulitis • Complicated diverticulitis = Presence of • macroperforation, obstruction, abscess or fistula • Simple diverticulitis = Absence of the above • complications
Simple Diverticulitis Hospitalization !?
Simple Diverticulitis • IV Antibiotics • Bowel rest, clear liquids for 2-3 days • Based on clinical findings advance diet (low residue) • and PO antibiotics
Simple Diverticulitis After resolution of attack - high fiber diet with supplemental fiber
Simple Diverticulitis • Follow-up: Colonoscopy in 4-6 weeks • Purpose • Exclude neoplasm • Evaluate extent of the diverticulosis
Simple Diverticulitis • Prognosis after resolution • 30-40% of patients will remain asymptomatic • 30-40% of patients will have episodic abdominal • cramps without frank diverticulitis • 20-30% of pts will have a second attack
Simple vs. Complicated Diverticulitis • Complicated diverticulitis = Presence of • macroperforation, obstruction, abscess or fistula • Simple diverticulitis = Absence of the above • complications
Complicated Diverticulitis • Hinchey classification • Pericolic abscess • Distal abscess • Purulent peritonitis • Fecal peritonitis Hinchey EJ et al. Treatment of perforated diverticular disease of the colon. Adv Surg. 1978
Complicated Diverticulitis • Hinchey classification • Pericolic abscess • Distal abscess • CT guided drainage
Complicated Diverticulitis Hinchey classification 3. Purulent peritonitis 4. Fecal peritonitis Surgery
Complicated Diverticulitis Hartman’s Procedure
Complicated Diverticulitis • Other clinical presentation • Bleeding • Stricture • Fistula
Complicated Diverticulitis Other clinical presentation Bleeding
Complicated Diverticulitis • Most only have symptoms of bloating and diarrhea but no significant abdominal pain • Painless hematochezia • Start – stop pattern; “water faucet” • Diverticulitis rarely causes bleeding • Right > Left
Complicated Diverticulitis Other clinical presentation Stricture
Complicated Diverticulitis • Chronic inflammation • Bloating • Constipation
Complicated Diverticulitis Other clinical presentation Stricture Surgery