Information
Editors
Diverticulitis and Diverticulosis
Essentials
- Diverticulosis describes the presence of pouches (diverticula) in the intestine. These are quite common and become significantly more so with age.
- Most diverticula occur in the large intestine, particularly in the sigmoid colon, on which this article concentrates.
- The most common complication of diverticulosis is diverticulitis, where a diverticulum becomes inflamed and may burst.
- Diverticulitis is divided into uncomplicated and complicated types.
- Uncomplicated diverticulitis is inflammation in an area of the intestine with diverticula, where the intestinal wall is intact and there are no signs of complications (such as an abscess or air outside the intestine).
- In complicated diverticulitis, the intestinal wall is perforated. If the resulting faecal contamination is localized, an abscess forms. If faecal contamination spreads more widely, peritonitis develops.
- Diverticulitis varies in severity from uncomplicated disease healing spontaneously (> 90%) to life-threatening peritonitis.
- Computerized tomography (CT) is recommended to diagnose the first episode of diverticulitis. Subsequently recurring mild disease with typical symptoms can be treated in primary health care based on the clinical picture.
- See also Acute Abdomen in the Adult.
Symptoms and findings
Diverticulosis
- Diverticulosis is usually asymptomatic, with no findings other than diverticula; this type of condition is called uncomplicated.
- Symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease (SUDD) is diverticula with abdominal symptoms but without macroscopic changes visible on colonoscopy.
- The diagnosis requires excluding other causes of abdominal symptoms by appropriate investigations.
- The symptoms resemble those of irritable bowel syndrome, and the two diseases probably overlap.
- Complications of diverticulosis include diverticulitis, strictures, haemorrhages and fistulas.
- Diverticulitis itself may be uncomplicated or complicated.
- A stricture will cause the clinical picture of intestinal obstruction, which may develop gradually.
- Bleeding from a diverticulum usually causes bright red rectal bleeding (haematochezia).
- A fistula is a tunnel developing from the intestine to an adjacent organ, such as the bladder or the vagina. Its symptoms may include passage of air in urine (pneumaturia) or the occurrence of faeces in the vagina.
Diverticulitis
- The clinical picture of acute diverticulitis includes pain in the left lower quadrant of the abdomen (sigmoid diverticulitis) and fever.
- Even in uncomplicated diverticulitis, CRP may be significantly elevated (as high as > 100).
- In uncomplicated diverticulitis, abdominal tenderness and any guarding are local (in the left lower quadrant) but more extensive peritoneal irritation or peritonism suggests a more severe form of disease.
- The severity of the disease can be assessed based on the staging presented in table T1.
Staging of diverticulitis based on clinical findings and imaging according to Sallinen et al., 2015 7. Uncomplicated diverticulitis diagnosed by clinical examination alone belongs to stage 1.
Stage | Complicated (abscess, extraluminal gas) | Abscess > 6 cm or gas in the abdominal cavity* | Clinical peritonitis | Organ dysfunction |
---|
1 | No | No | No | No |
2 | Yes | No | No | No |
3 | Yes | Yes | No | No |
4 | Yes | Yes | Yes | No |
5 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |