ISCHEMIC COLITIS



In older patients inflammatory bowel disease may be simulated by ischemic injury to the colon. This ischemic injury, which may be acute or chronic, usually occurs as a complication of se­vere atherosclerosis. More rarely it results from vascular injury secondary to surgery or a dissect­ing aneurysm, from a low cardiac output state, from vasculitis, or from a hypercoagulable state. The ischemia is more likely to occur in “wa­tershed areas” between the distributions of two major vessels (splenic flexure, rectosigmoid area] and is usually secondary to hypoperfusion rather than to complete obstruction. The rectum is al­most always spared because of its collateral blood supplies. The clinical picture may be acute or chronic, with all gradations between.

Acute ischemic colitis is usually manifested by the sudden onset of localized abdominal pain, tenderness, and rectal bleeding, which is some­times associated with fever, hypotension, tachy­cardia, and peritoneal signs. Sigmoidoscopy or co­lonoscopy may show no abnormalities but more frequently shows multiple ulcers or bulging areas of submucosal hemorrhage. Barium enema ex­amination is hazardous during the acute phase, but when carried out later most characteristically shows areas of narrowing and the changes in the bowel outline called “thumbprinting” caused by mucosal hemorrhage and edema. Acute ischemic colitis may be difficult to distinguish from IBD or diverticulitis. Most acute ischemic episodes re­solve over the subsequent several weeks with gen­eral supportive measures. Angiography is rarely indicated, and surgery is reserved for patients with clear evidence of perforation and/or infarc­tion. The patient who recovers from an acute ep­isode may remain well subsequently or may enter a more chronic phase of the illness.





2007 Eylül



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