Large Bowel Ischemia/Infarction: How to Recognize It and Make Differential Diagnosis? A Review
Francesca Iacobellis,
Donatella Narese,
Daniela Berritto,
Antonio Brillantino,
Marco Di Serafino,
Susanna Guerrini,
Roberta Grassi,
Mariano Scaglione,
Maria Antonietta Mazzei,
Luigia Romano
Affiliations
Francesca Iacobellis
Department of General and Emergency Radiology, “Antonio Cardarelli” Hospital, Antonio Cardarelli St. 9, 80131 Naples, Italy
Donatella Narese
Department of Radiology, University of Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Miraglia 2 Sq., 80138 Naples, Italy
Daniela Berritto
Department of Radiology, Hospital “Villa Fiorita”, Appia St., km 199,00, 81043 Capua, Italy
Antonio Brillantino
Department of Emergency Surgery, “Antonio Cardarelli” Hospital, Antonio Cardarelli St. 9, 80131 Naples, Italy
Marco Di Serafino
Department of General and Emergency Radiology, “Antonio Cardarelli” Hospital, Antonio Cardarelli St. 9, 80131 Naples, Italy
Susanna Guerrini
Unit of Diagnostic Imaging, Department of Radiological Sciences, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Senese, Bracci St. 10, 53100 Siena, Italy
Roberta Grassi
Department of Radiology, University of Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Miraglia 2 Sq., 80138 Naples, Italy
Mariano Scaglione
Department of Radiology, James Cook University Hospital, Marton Road, Middlesbrough TS4 3BW, UK
Maria Antonietta Mazzei
Unit of Diagnostic Imaging, Department of Medical, Surgical and Neuro Sciences and of Radiological Sciences, University of Siena, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria Senese, Bracci St. 10, 53100 Siena, Italy
Luigia Romano
Department of General and Emergency Radiology, “Antonio Cardarelli” Hospital, Antonio Cardarelli St. 9, 80131 Naples, Italy
Ischemic colitis represents the most frequent form of intestinal ischemia occurring when there is an acute impairment or chronic reduction in the colonic blood supply, resulting in mucosal ulceration, inflammation, hemorrhage and ischemic necrosis of variable severity. The clinical presentation is variable and nonspecific, so it is often misdiagnosed. The most common etiology is hypoperfusion, almost always associated with generalized atherosclerotic disease. The severity ranges from localized and transient ischemia to transmural necrosis of the bowel wall, becoming a surgical emergency, with significant associated morbidity and mortality. The diagnosis is based on clinical, laboratory suspicion and radiological, endoscopic and histopathological findings. Among the radiological tests, enhanced-CT is the diagnostic investigation of choice. It allows us to make the diagnosis in an appropriate clinical setting, and to define the entity of the ischemia. MR may be adopted in the follow-up in patients with iodine allergy or renal dysfunctions, or younger patients who should avoid radiological exposure. In the majority of cases, supportive therapy is the only required treatment. In this article we review the pathophysiology and the imaging findings of ischemic colitis.