CASE 16161 Published on 21.10.2018

Diverticulitis of a Giant Colonic Diverticulum

Section

Abdominal imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Pramod Gupta, MD,
Vidisha Ghole, MD

Dallas VA Medical Center, Dallas, Texas
Patient

65 years, male

Categories
Area of Interest Colon ; Imaging Technique CT
Clinical History
A 65 year old man presented in emergency room with severe lower abdominal pain. His white blood counts were slightly elevated. A CT scan was obtained.
Imaging Findings
CT scan (Figure1) showed a giant sigmoid diverticulum in mid pelvis measuring 5 cm in size. The wall of diverticulum was thick and enhancing with mild surrounding inflammatory changes indicating diverticulitis.
CT scan obtained few months later (Figure 2) showed resolution of acute inflammation and decrease in wall thickness of the diverticulum.
Discussion
Although colonic diverticulosis is common, a giant colonic diverticulum (GCD), which is defined by size > 4 cm, is a rare entity. The majority (93%) of GCD occur in sigmoid colon. Concomitant diverticular disease is present in 85% of the cases. [1-4]
Histologically, three types of GCD have been described: Type 1 (22%) is a pseudodiverticulum composed of remnants of muscularis mucosa, inflammatory cells, and fibrous tissue. Type 2 (66%) is an inflammatory diverticulum composed of scar tissue only arising from local perforation and abscess formation. Type 3 (12%) is a true diverticulum containing all bowel wall layers.[1] There are two main hypothesis to the formation of GCD. The first claim that an unidirectional ball-valve mechanism, through a tiny communicating diverticular neck causes air entrapment and gradual enlargement of the diverticulum while the other asserts that gas forming organisms are responsible for GCD. [2]
The majority of patients presents after the 6th decade of life. The common presenting symptoms are abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, constipation, diarrhea, and melena.
The two most common complications of giant colonic diverticulum are perforation and abscess formation.[3]
Abdominal X-ray may show a large, smoothly marginated, air filled cyst ('Balloon-sign') with or without air-fluid level. On barium or water-soluble contrast enema examination, the diverticulum is opacified in 60% of cases. The wall of the diverticulum should be smooth and regular. If wall is irregular or lobulated, neoplasm should be excluded. At Ct, GCD appears as a thin walled pericolonic air and fluid collection adjacent to sigmoid colon measuring more than 4 cm. The diverticulum may develop wall thickening and increased enhancement in the setting of acute inflammation/diverticulitis, such as in our case.[1-4] Connection to the colon can be demonstrated in approximately 80% of cases. In the remainder , the communication to the colon is diminutive, seen only at pathological analysis. [3]
The treatment of choice is surgical management , although high-risk, elderly, and asymptomatic patients may be managed conservatively.[3]
'Written informed patient consent for publication has been obtained.'
Differential Diagnosis List
Diverticulitis of a giant colonic diverticulum
Abscess
Bowel Duplication
Final Diagnosis
Diverticulitis of a giant colonic diverticulum
Case information
URL: https://www.eurorad.org/case/16161
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.16161
ISSN: 1563-4086
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