Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Colonic inflammation due to bacterial, viral, fungal, or parasitic infections
Best imaging tool: CECT with multiplanar reformations
Mucosal hyperenhancement, marked submucosal edema, ascites
Multiple air-fluid levels, inflamed pericolonic fat
Ultrasound findings
Symmetric wall thickening and submucosal echogenicity
Increased mural flow on color Doppler
Fluoroscopic findings
Used less frequently than before; now supplanted by CT, US, and endoscopy
Clostridium difficile , Campylobacter , Escherichia coli , CMV
Accordion sign: Alternating bands of enhancing mucosa and submucosal edema with compressed lumen
May progress to hemorrhagic necrosis and perforation; toxic megacolon
Ulcerative colitis (UC)
Wall thickening is generally less prominent with UC
Crohn's disease
Ischemic colitis
Usually located in watershed areas, rarely pancolitis
Rectum is rarely affected by ischemic colitis
C. difficile colitis occurs mostly in institutionalized patients or those on antibiotic, chemotherapy, or immunosuppressive medication
Acute infectious diarrhea is most often foodborne or waterborne disease
Most common bacterial causes of infectious colitis in USA
C. difficile , Salmonella , Campylobacter , and E. coli
Symptoms: Watery or bloody diarrhea, fever
Painful abdominal cramps and tenderness
Usually acute onset, except TB (chronic)
Diagnosis: Stool cultures, blood cultures, endoscopic biopsy, serology studies
Often self-limited or responsive to antimicrobial therapy in previously healthy patients
Colonic inflammation due to bacterial, viral, fungal, or parasitic infections
Pseudomembranous colitis: Descriptive term usually applied to Clostridium difficile colitis
Best diagnostic clue
Usually pancolitis, including rectum
Location
Dependent on etiology
C. difficile : Segmental or pancolitis
Entire colon usually involved; distal small bowel (SB) uncommonly
Campylobacteriosis: Pancolitis ± SB
Escherichia coli (O157:H7): Pancolitis
Cytomegalovirus (CMV): Distal ileum and right colon or pancolitis
Yersinia enterocolitis: Predominantly right colon, occasionally left; invariably in terminal ileum
Right lower quadrant clusters of enlarged nodes
Typhoid fever (salmonellosis): Cecum or right colon, invariably in ileum
Shigellosis: Predominantly in left colon
TB: Right and proximal transverse colon, involves ileum
Actinomycosis: Rectosigmoid colon (intrauterine devices), ileocecal region (appendectomy)
Gonorrhea, chlamydia, herpes, syphilis: Rectosigmoid colon
Histoplasmosis: Ileocecal region
Mucormycosis: Right colon
Anisakiasis: Occasionally in right colon, rarely in transverse colon
Amebiasis: Right colon ± terminal ileum
Schistosomiasis: Left or sigmoid colon
Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles
If you are a member. Log in here