Cecal diverticulitis
- 1 October 1987
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Diseases of the Colon & Rectum
- Vol. 30 (10) , 821-826
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02554637
Abstract
The etiology of cecal diverticulitis remains unclear. The majority of diverticula are solitary and probably false and may be the result of the same degenerative process seen in the more common left-sided diverticulosis. A minority are true diverticula and may be of congenital origin. Cecal diverticulitis is clinically indistinguishable from acute appendicitis although patients with cecal diverticulitis tend to be older (average age, 40 years), have a longer duration of symptoms, and present less often with nausea and vomiting. In patients with previous appendectomy and in those with more indolent symptoms, barium enema may be helpful in making the diagnosis. If nonoperative treatment is chosen, careful follow-up with air contrast barium enema and colonoscopy should be carried out. The majority of patients require surgery and two types of cecal diverticulitis are encountered at laparotomy. The usual type, accounting for two thirds of cases, is easy to recognize, has an inflamed projection from the cecal wall, and is dealt with by a limited local diverticulectomy. Some authors advocate nonsurgical treatment for this first group of patients. Incidental appendectomy is advocated to avoid confusion should symptoms occur postoperatively. The hidden variant presents as a large, indurated phlegmon and is difficult to distinguish from a perforated ceal carcinoma. With the hidden variant, right hemicolectomy is the surgical treatment of choice and carries a 1.4 percent mortality.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Postmortem survey of diverticular disease of the colon. I. Diverticulosis and diverticulitis.Gut, 1969
- Diverticulitis of the Cecum and Ascending ColonArchives of Surgery, 1961
- Diverticulitis of the cecum and right colon: Clinical and radiographic featuresDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1958
- Diverticulitis of the cecumThe American Journal of Surgery, 1940
- ILEOCECAL RESECTION FOR ACUTE DIVERTICULITIS OF SOLITARY DIVERTICULUM OF ASCENDING COLON*Annals of Surgery, 1936
- DIVERTICULOSIS OF THE LARGE INTESTINE; AN EVALUATION OF HISTORICAL AND PERSONAL OBSERVATIONSAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1935
- Diverticulitis of the cecumThe American Journal of Surgery, 1933
- PRIMARY SOLITARY DIVERTICULITIS OF CAECUMAnnals of Surgery, 1930
- Diverticulitis of the Cecum, with Report of Three CasesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1923
- WHEN APPENDICITIS IS NOT APPENDICITIS: A CASE OF DIVERTICULITIS OF THE CECUMPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1922