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Saudi Journal of Gastroenterology [The]. 2012; 18 (2): 122-128
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-118275

ABSTRACT

In contrast to diverticulosis of the colon, jejunal diverticulosis is a rare entity that often becomes clinically relevant only after exacerbations occur. The variety of symptoms and low incidence make this disease a difficult differential diagnosis. Data from all patients who were treated in our surgical department for complicated jejunal diverticulitis, that is, gastrointestinal hemorrhage or a diverticula perforation were collected prospectively over a 6-year period [January 2004 to January 2010] and analyzed retrospectively. The median age among the 9 patients was 82 years [range: 54-87]. Except for 2 cases [elective operation for a status postjejunal peridiverticulitis and a re-perforation of a diverticula in a patient s/p segment resection with free perforation], the diagnosis could only be confirmed with an exploratory laparotomy. Perforation was observed in 5 patients, one of which was a retroperitoneal perforation. The retroperitoneal perforation was associated with transanal hemorrhage. Hemodynamically relevant transanal hemorrhage requiring transfusion were the reason for an exploratory laparotomy in 2 further cases. In one patient, the hemorrhage was the result of a systemic vasculitis with resultant gastrointestinal involvement. A singular jejunal diverticulum caused an adhesive ileus in one patient. The extent of jejunal diverticulosis varied between a singular diverticulum to complete jejunal involvement. A tangential, transverse excision of the diverticulum was carried out in 3 patients. The indication for segment resection was made in the case of a perforation with associated peritonitis [n=4] as well as the presence of 5 or more diverticula [n=2]. Histological analysis revealed chronic pandiverticulitis in all patients. Median operating time amounted to 142 minutes [range: 65-210] and the median in-hospital stay was 12 days [range: 5-45]. Lethality was 0%. Major complications included secondary wound closure after s/p repeated lavage and bilateral pleural effusions in one case. Signs of malabsorption as the result of a short bowel syndrome were not observed. Minor complications included protracted intestinal atony in 2 cases and pneumonia in one case. Median follow-up was 6 months [range: 1-18]. Complicated jejunal diverticulitis often remains elusive preoperatively due to its unspecific clinical presentation. A definitive diagnosis can often only be made intraoperatively. The resection of all diverticula and/or the complete diverticula-laden segment is the goal in chronic cases. The operative approach chosen [tangential, transverse excision vs segment resection] should be based on the extent of the jejunal diverticulosis as well as the intraoperative findings


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Middle Aged , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Diverticulum/complications , Jejunal Diseases/diagnosis , Diverticulum/diagnosis , Diverticulum/surgery , Jejunal Diseases/surgery
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