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. 2014 Jul;12(3):221-8.
doi: 10.5217/ir.2014.12.3.221. Epub 2014 Jul 25.

Is colonoscopy necessary after computed tomography diagnosis of acute diverticulitis?

Affiliations

Is colonoscopy necessary after computed tomography diagnosis of acute diverticulitis?

Min Jung Kim et al. Intest Res. 2014 Jul.

Abstract

Background/aims: A diagnosis of acute diverticulitis is based on computed tomography (CT). Colonoscopy is commonly performed after the acute event to exclude other diagnoses. This study aimed to determine whether colonoscopy is necessary and what additional information is gained from a colonoscopy after acute diverticulitis.

Methods: Acute diverticulitis was diagnosed by clinical criteria and characteristic CT findings. We analyzed the number of patients in whom colorectal cancers were diagnosed and other incidental findings of polyps and other diseases.

Results: A total of 177 patients were analyzed retrospectively. The mean age was 43.3±15.3 years (range, 13-82 years) and 97 patients (54.8%) were male. Sixty-one patients had undergone a colonoscopy within 1 year of the acute attack. Advanced adenomatous lesions and colonic malignancy were not detected. Nineteen patients (31.1%) had ≥1 polyp and 11 patients (18.0%) had an adenomatous polyp. No new or different diagnosis was made after colonoscopy. None of the 116 patients who did not undergo colonoscopy within a year after acute diverticulitis had a diagnosis of colorectal cancer registered with the Korea Central Cancer Registry.

Conclusions: Routine colonoscopy yields little benefit in patients with acute diverticulitis diagnosed by typical clinical symptoms and CT. The current practice of a colonoscopy after acute diverticulitis needs to be reevaluated.

Keywords: Colonoscopy; Diverticulitis.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest: None.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Patient flow chart.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Acute diverticulitis. (A) Diverticulitis of the ascending colon in a 34-year-old man. The axial CT scan shows marked wall thickening of the ascending colon with an inflamed diverticulum (long arrow) and pericolic infiltration (short arrow). (B) Diverticulitis of the ascending colon in a 40-year-old man. Colonoscopy shows a diverticular orifice (black arrow) appearing inflamed, with mucopurulent exudate on the ascending colon.

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