Endoscopy 2004; 36(8): 757
DOI: 10.1055/s-2004-814535
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© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Cecal Diverticulitis: An Unusual Endoscopic Finding

F.  J.  Fernández-Pérez1 , C.  De Sola1 , N.  Fernández-Moreno1 , R.  Rivera-Irigoin1 , E.  Ubiña-Aznar1 , G.  García-Fernández1 , J.  M.  Navarro-Jarabo1 , P.  Moreno-Mejías1 , A.  Ibañez-Pinto1 , A.  Sanchez-Cantos1
  • 1Dept. of Gastroenterology, Costa del Sol Hospital, Marbella, Spain
Further Information

F. J. Fernández-Pérez, M. D.

Dept. of Gastroenterology
Costa del Sol Hospital

Ctra. Nacional 340, Km 187
Marbella 29600, Malaga
Spain

Fax: +34-952-823219

Email: ffernandezp@meditex.es

Publication History

Publication Date:
28 July 2004 (online)

Table of Contents
    Zoom Image

    Figure 1 Colonoscopy must be avoided whenever colonic diverticulitis is suspected. However, some patients are diagnosed endoscopically, most of them with left-sided diverticulitis. A 74 year-old woman presented with lower right abdominal pain. Her physical examination did not show any evidence of an abdominal mass or any peritoneal signs. Complementary studies showed a neutrophil count of10 950/ml and cecal wall thickening, with distortion of the surrounding fatty tissue on abdominal computed tomography, suggesting a colonic tumor.

    Zoom Image

    Figure 2 Colonoscopy revealed fecal impaction inside a diverticular orifice close to the appendix, with severe mucosal inflammation surrounding it. There was no evidence of neoplasm. Diverticulectomy and appendectomy were carried out, with no postoperative complications: clinical practice, right-sided colonic diverticulitis is a rare finding, and a colonoscopic diagnosis is exceptional.

    F. J. Fernández-Pérez, M. D.

    Dept. of Gastroenterology
    Costa del Sol Hospital

    Ctra. Nacional 340, Km 187
    Marbella 29600, Malaga
    Spain

    Fax: +34-952-823219

    Email: ffernandezp@meditex.es

    F. J. Fernández-Pérez, M. D.

    Dept. of Gastroenterology
    Costa del Sol Hospital

    Ctra. Nacional 340, Km 187
    Marbella 29600, Malaga
    Spain

    Fax: +34-952-823219

    Email: ffernandezp@meditex.es

    Zoom Image

    Figure 1 Colonoscopy must be avoided whenever colonic diverticulitis is suspected. However, some patients are diagnosed endoscopically, most of them with left-sided diverticulitis. A 74 year-old woman presented with lower right abdominal pain. Her physical examination did not show any evidence of an abdominal mass or any peritoneal signs. Complementary studies showed a neutrophil count of10 950/ml and cecal wall thickening, with distortion of the surrounding fatty tissue on abdominal computed tomography, suggesting a colonic tumor.

    Zoom Image

    Figure 2 Colonoscopy revealed fecal impaction inside a diverticular orifice close to the appendix, with severe mucosal inflammation surrounding it. There was no evidence of neoplasm. Diverticulectomy and appendectomy were carried out, with no postoperative complications: clinical practice, right-sided colonic diverticulitis is a rare finding, and a colonoscopic diagnosis is exceptional.