Showing posts with label duodenal outpouching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label duodenal outpouching. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 June 2012

DUODENAL DIVERTICULUM

85 yrs male with history of fall
Axial plain CT section through pancreas: well defined airpocket with adjacent solid debris noted potero medial to head of pancreas (coronal reformation showed this as outpouching from 3rd part of duodenum)- s/o incidental duodenal diverticulum.

·        Duodenal diverticula are common and are incidentally discovered.
·        Most are acquired, rather than congenital, abnormalities.
·        Easily recognized on upper gastrointestinal barium examinations as collections of gas and barium in round or oval sacklike protrusions that usually arise from the medial aspect of the periampullary duodenum.
·        The typical CT appearance of a duodenal diverticulum has been described as a thin-walled rounded collection of gas and oral contrast material situated along the medial border of the junction of the second and third portions of the duodenum.
·        On T2-weighted MR imaging, duodenal diverticula may contain both high-signal-intensity areas (related to the presence of fluid) and low-signal-intensity areas (related to the presence of gas).
·        Duodenal diverticula are rarely symptomatic, although they may make cannulation of the common bile duct difficult during an ERCP or may become impacted with debris, leading to duodenal diverticulitis.
·        Complications of hemorrhage and increased prevalence of choledocholithiasis have been described.
·        Misinterpretation of a duodenal diverticulum on CT as a pancreatic tumor, metastatic lymph node, pancreatic pseudocyst, or pancreatic abscess has been reported.
·        One may be unable to distinguish duodenal diverticula on CT or MR imaging if their content is purely fluid.
·        The differential diagnosis of a cystic lesion in the region of the head of the pancreas includes cystic pancreatic neoplasms, inflammatory processes (such as pseudocysts), and duodenal diverticula.
·        Three cystic tumors are relatively common pancreatic neoplasms—an intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm, mucinous cystic neoplasm, and serous cystic neoplasm.
Reference: Duodenal Diverticula Mimicking Cystic Neoplasms of the Pancreas: CT and MR Imaging Findings in Seven Patients, AJR January 2003 vol. 180 no. 1 195-199.