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Aunque pueda contener afirmaciones, datos o apuntes procedentes de instituciones o profesionales sanitarios, la información contenida en el blog EMS Solutions International está editada y elaborada por profesionales de la salud. Recomendamos al lector que cualquier duda relacionada con la salud sea consultada con un profesional del ámbito sanitario. by Dr. Ramon REYES, MD

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DIVERTICULITIS ENG by DrRamonReyesMD

 



DIVERTICULITIS AND DIVERTICULAR DISEASE OF THE COLON

COMPREHENSIVE SCIENTIFIC REVIEW — PATHOPHYSIOLOGY, CLINICAL FEATURES, AND MANAGEMENT (2026 UPDATE)


1. PRECISE MEDICAL DEFINITION AND NOMENCLATURE

Diverticular disease = pathological spectrum including:

  • Diverticulosis: anatomical presence of diverticula without inflammation
  • Diverticulitis: inflammation ± infection of a diverticulum
  • Complicated diverticulitis: abscess, perforation, fistula, obstruction, or peritonitis

Colonic diverticulum = sac-like herniation of mucosa and submucosa through defects in the muscular layer → acquired pseudodiverticulum (does not contain all bowel wall layers)


2. MICRO- AND MACROSCOPIC PATHOLOGIC ANATOMY

Diverticula arise at:

  • vascular penetration points (vasa recta)
  • muscular weak zones
  • mesenteric border

Structural features

  • typical diameter: 5–10 mm
  • maximum: ≈2 cm
  • predominant location: sigmoid colon (high intraluminal pressure zone)

3. GLOBAL EPIDEMIOLOGY

Prevalence increases with age:

Age Prevalence
<40 <10%
>60 ~50%
>80 >65%

Risk factors

  • low-fiber diet
  • visceral obesity
  • sedentary lifestyle
  • smoking
  • chronic NSAID use
  • altered gut microbiota

4. ADVANCED PATHOPHYSIOLOGY

4.1 FORMATION MECHANICS

Sigmoid colon generates high segmental pressures.

Laplace law

T = P × r

Where
T = wall tension
P = intraluminal pressure
r = radius

↑ segmental pressure → ↑ tension → mucosal herniation.


4.2 TRANSITION: DIVERTICULOSIS → DIVERTICULITIS

Accepted mechanism:

  1. fecal impaction in diverticular neck
  2. ostial obstruction
  3. bacterial proliferation
  4. local inflammation
  5. microperforation

Result:

  • pericolonic inflammation
  • phlegmon
  • abscess

4.3 IMMUNE-INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE

Activated mediators:

  • IL-6
  • TNF-α
  • C-reactive protein
  • neutrophils

Severity depends on:

  • perforation size
  • bacterial load
  • host immunity

5. CLINICAL PRESENTATION

5.1 NON-INFLAMED DIVERTICULOSIS

Often asymptomatic. When symptomatic:

  • chronic LLQ pain
  • bloating
  • bowel habit change

Absent:

  • fever
  • leukocytosis
  • elevated CRP

5.2 ACUTE DIVERTICULITIS

Classic triad:

  • left lower quadrant pain
  • fever
  • leukocytosis

Additional findings:

  • nausea
  • constipation or diarrhea
  • urinary irritation symptoms
  • localized guarding

5.3 RED FLAGS

  • peritoneal signs
  • hypotension
  • tachycardia
  • elevated lactate
  • confusion
  • diffuse pain

→ suspect perforation or sepsis.


6. MODIFIED HINCHEY CLASSIFICATION

I — localized inflammation / small abscess
II — pelvic or retroperitoneal abscess
III — purulent peritonitis
IV — fecal peritonitis


7. DIAGNOSIS

GOLD STANDARD

Contrast-enhanced abdominopelvic CT

Diagnostic findings:

  • bowel wall thickening >4 mm
  • inflamed pericolic fat
  • abscess
  • free air
  • free fluid

LAB FINDINGS

Typical:

  • neutrophilic leukocytosis
  • elevated CRP
  • procalcitonin if complicated

Colonoscopy Contraindicated in acute phase → perforation risk.


8. COMPLICATIONS

  • abscess
  • perforation
  • colovesical fistula
  • obstruction
  • lower GI bleeding

9. EVIDENCE-BASED MANAGEMENT

9.1 UNCOMPLICATED DIVERTICULITIS

Modern guidelines:

Antibiotics not routinely required

Indications:

  • immunocompromised state
  • sepsis
  • severe comorbidity
  • high fever
  • markedly elevated CRP

Standard care:

  • liquid diet initially
  • analgesia
  • hydration
  • clinical monitoring

9.2 COMPLICATED DIVERTICULITIS

Requires:

  • hospitalization
  • IV antibiotics
  • serial CT
  • possible percutaneous drainage

9.3 SURGICAL INDICATIONS

Urgent if:

  • peritonitis
  • free perforation
  • treatment failure
  • sepsis

Procedures:

  • sigmoid resection
  • Hartmann procedure
  • selected primary anastomosis

10. EMPIRIC ANTIBIOTIC REGIMENS

Coverage must include:

  • Gram negatives
  • anaerobes

Common regimens:

  • ceftriaxone + metronidazole
  • piperacillin–tazobactam
  • amoxicillin–clavulanate

11. PROGNOSIS

Uncomplicated diverticulitis
Mortality <1%

Complicated with sepsis
Mortality up to 15%

Recurrence risk
20–35%


12. SECONDARY PREVENTION

Evidence-supported:

✔ high-fiber diet
✔ regular exercise
✔ visceral fat reduction
✔ avoid chronic NSAIDs

Not supported:

  • avoiding seeds
  • avoiding nuts

Current evidence shows no causal relationship.


13. COMMON CLINICAL ERRORS

Even experienced physicians may:

  • prescribe antibiotics to all cases
  • order colonoscopy during acute phase
  • omit CT imaging
  • underestimate mild pain in elderly patients
  • misdiagnose as IBS

14. ADVANCED PATHOPHYSIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE

Diverticular disease is now considered:

multifactorial biomechanical + microbiomic + chronic inflammatory disorder

Active research areas:

  • colonic dysbiosis
  • neuromuscular dysfunction
  • collagen defects of bowel wall

15. HIGH-LEVEL MEDICAL CONCLUSION

Diverticulitis is not merely infection of a colonic sac.
It is a dynamic process involving interaction among:

  • intraluminal pressure
  • wall architecture
  • microbiota
  • mucosal immunity

Modern management requires:

  • risk stratification
  • precise radiologic diagnosis
  • individualized therapy
  • avoidance of unnecessary antibiotics

CLINICAL MASTER STATEMENT

Diverticulitis is a segmental inflammatory condition of the colon secondary to diverticular microperforation whose severity depends more on the host inflammatory response than on diverticulum size.


Author Attribution:
DrRamonReyesMD — Scientific Clinical Edition 2026



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