Large Intestine: Ischemic Colitis
Ischemic Colitis
Basics
- Inflammation Caused by Ischemia
- Can Lead to Mucosal Injury or Full-Thickness Necrosis/Perforation
- Most Common Site: Watershed Areas
- Most Have Less Severe Disease & Can Be Managed Medically
- Can be Acute or Chronic
Causes
- Nonocclusive/Low Flow States (Most Common)
- Most Cases Have No Specific Cause Defined
- Sepsis
- Hemorrhagic Shock
- Hypotension
- Myocardial Infarction
- Hemodialysis
- Cardiopulmonary Bypass
- Medications (Opioids, etc)
- Occlusive
- Thrombus
- Emboli
Symptoms
- Abdominal Pain
- Diarrhea
- Hematochezia
- Nausea & Vomiting
- Fever
Diagnosis
- Initial Test: CT – Often Suggestive but Nonspecific
- Then Colonoscopy (Gold Standard) if No Immediate Indications for Surgery
- No Bowel Prep
- Minimize Insufflation
- Do Not Advance Past Distal Extent of the Disease
Treatment
- Initial Tx: Conservative (Bowel Rest, IV Fluid Resuscitation & ABX)
- Treat Any Underlying Etiology
- Serial Abdominal Exams
- ABX to Protect from Bacterial Translocation
- Surgical Resection Indications:
- Gangrenous Bowel
- Perforation
- Peritonitis
- Sepsis
- Massive Hemorrhage
- Unstable
Ischemic Colitis on Colonoscopy 1
Ischemic Colitis on CT 2
References
- Kum F, Gulati A, Hussain A. Hyperamylasaemia and ischaemic colitis. Int J Surg Case Rep. 2014;5(2):63-6. (License: CC BY-NC-SA-3.0)
- Viswanathan C, Bhosale P, Ganeshan DM, Truong MT, Silverman P, Balachandran A. Imaging of complications of oncological therapy in the gastrointestinal system. Cancer Imaging. 2012 May 7;12(1):163-72. (License: CC BY-4.0)