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Case 57 - Transient ischemia of the bowel

from Section 9 - Gastrointestinal tract

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

Fergus V. Coakley
Affiliation:
University of California, San Francisco
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Summary

Imaging description

Traditional CT signs of acute mesenteric ischemia such as visceral artery occlusion, pneumatosis, portomesenteric venous gas, and bowel wall thickening are generally derived from surgically proven series [1,2]. This is scientifically rigorous but does not account for the fact that many patients with presumed thromboembolic mesenteric ischemia do not go to surgery, and are characterized by milder degrees of self-limiting segmental bowel dilatation, bowel wall thickening, mesenteric infiltration, and ascites (Figures 57.1–57.4) [3, 4]. The emerging concept that acute mesenteric ischemia covers a clinicoradiological spectrum varying from mild and self-limiting to severe and life-threatening [3] is analogous to the spectrum of neurological deficits due to cerebrovascular insufficiency varying from transient ischemic attack to full-blown stroke. The term “transient ischemia of the bowel” has reasonably been proposed to describe those with the milder forms of acute mesenteric ischemia.

Importance

It is likely that transient ischemia of the bowel is underrecognized. In one series, 8 of 30 patients with acute abdominal pain and atrial fibrillation had CT signs of end-organ ischemia or infarction [3]. Atrial fibrillation affects an estimated 2.3 million Americans [5], so the population at risk is substantial. Failure to recognize the diagnosis may result in a missed opportunity for reassessment of anticoagulation status.

Type
Chapter
Information
Pearls and Pitfalls in Abdominal Imaging
Pseudotumors, Variants and Other Difficult Diagnoses
, pp. 192 - 195
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Wiesner, W, Mortele, KJ, Glickman, JN, Ji, H, Ros, PR. Pneumatosis intestinalis and portomesenteric venous gas in intestinal ischemia: Correlation of CT findings with severity of ischemia and clinical outcome. Am J Roentgenol 2001; 177: 1319–1323.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Aschoff, AJ, Stuber, G, Becker, BW, et al. Evaluation of acute mesenteric ischemia: accuracy of biphasic mesenteric multi-detector CT angiography. Abdom Imaging 2009; 34: 345–357.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hunt, SJ, Coakley, FV, Webb, EM, Westphalen, AC, Yeh, BM. CT of the acute abdomen in patients with atrial fibrillation. J Comput Assist Tomogr 2009; 33: 280–285.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barajas, RF, Yeh, BM, Webb, EM, et al. CT of the non-traumatic acute abdomen in patients with atrial fibrillation. Am J Roentgenol 2009; 193: 485–492.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, M, Nelson, BP. Atrial fibrillation. Mt Sinai J Med 2006; 73: 482–492.Google ScholarPubMed

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