Ischemic colitis

Background

Intestinal Ischemic Disorder Types

  • Ischemic colitis
    • Accounts for 80-85% of intestinal ischemia
    • Due to non-occlusive disease with decreased blood flow to the colon.
    • Causes decreased perfusion leading to sub-mucosal or mucosal ischemia only.
    • Typical to the "watershed areas" of the colon (Splenic flexure or Sigmoid)
  • Acute mesenteric ischemia
    • Due to complete occlusion of mesenteric vessels
    • Complete transmural ischemia

Clinical Features

  • Consider ischemic colitis as the possible cause of acute-onset abdominal pain with rectal bleeding in patients age 50 and older with cardiovascular morbidities.[1]

Differential Diagnosis

Colitis

Diffuse Abdominal pain

Evaluation

Workup

  • CTA (first-line imaging)[2]

Diagnosis

Management

  • Give antibiotics in suspected ischemic colitis if the patient has any of the factors associated with severe disease.[3]
  • Place an emergent surgical consultation for any patient with peritoneal signs on physical exam or pneumatosis coli, portal venous gas, pan-colonic distribution, or isolated right-colon ischemia on imaging.[4]

Disposition

See Also

External Links

References


See Also

References