Abstract

Small bowel diverticulitis is a rare condition that is often excluded in the differential diagnosis of acute abdomen. We herein present two cases of patients with small bowel diverticulitis who presented with acute abdomen. First case was a 72-year-old lady who presented to emergency with 2 days of sudden-onset worsening generalized abdominal pain. The computed tomography (CT) revealed a segment of abnormally thickened jejunum with marked adjacent inflammatory mesenteric fat stranding and adjacent extraluminal gas locules, in keeping with complicating perforation. The patient was subsequently taken to the operating theater for an emergency laparotomy which revealed a contained perforation of the proximal jejunum secondary to a ruptured diverticulum. 20 cm of proximal jejunum containing the perforation was resected. The patient recovered uneventfully and was discharged day 7 following the operation. Second case was a 78-year-old lady who presented with 12 h of sudden-onset right-sided abdominal pain. The CT revealed the presence of multiple diverticula in the jejunum associated with diffuse wall thickening and marked peridiverticular inflammatory changes. This was most in keeping with small bowel diverticulitis, however, there was no definite extraluminal gas to suggest any evidence of perforation. The patient was managed conservatively with intravenous antibiotics and bowel rest. The patient’s pain improved with improving inflammatory markers during the hospital stay. The patient was discharged day 4 following the admission. We believe that there is a need to devise a comprehensive treatment guidelines specific for small bowel diverticulitis. In the meantime, it is deemed safe to conservatively manage uncomplicated cases without perforation. Key words: Intestine, small, abnormalities, abdomen, acute, diverticulosis, colonic, diverticulitis, colonic, clinical protocols, tomography, computed.

Highlights

  • Diverticulosis is the term used to describe the formation of abnormal outpouchings from the intestinal lumen due to mucosal herniation through weak points in the

  • There is no specific diagnostic computed tomography (CT) protocol for small bowel diverticulitis, imaging with intravenous as well as oral or rectal contrast is recommended in setting of acute abdomen (Horton et al, 2000)

  • Small bowel diverticulitis is rare condition that can provide diagnostic challenge in patients presenting with acute abdomen

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Summary

Introduction

Diverticulosis is the term used to describe the formation of abnormal outpouchings from the intestinal lumen due to mucosal herniation through weak points in the. Diverticulitis typically presents with localized abdominal pain or symptoms of its complications, including bowel obstruction, peritonitis, abscess or fistula formation (Gross and Katz, 2003). Diverticulitis predominantly occurs in the colon, and their occurrence in the small bowel is far less common due to their larger diverticulum size, better intra-luminal flow and relatively sterile luminal content (Harbi et al, 2017). Owing to seldom occurrence there is only limited data on small bowel diverticulitis across the literature. There is no clear consensus as to whether we should be treating small bowel diverticulitis with comparable therapeutic approach to treating colonic diverticulitis (Veen et al, 2009)

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