Diverticulosis and diverticulitis

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Diverticulosis and diverticulitis

Abdomen 2

Abdomen 2

Esophagus histology
Stomach histology
Small intestine histology
Colon histology
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
GERD, peptic ulcers, gastritis, and stomach cancer: Pathology review
Eosinophilic esophagitis (NORD)
Peptic ulcer
Intussusception
Appendicitis: Pathology review
Appendicitis
Esophageal disorders: Pathology review
Inflammatory bowel disease: Pathology review
Acid reducing medications
Laxatives and cathartics
Fats and lipids
Carbohydrates and sugars
Chewing and swallowing
Proteins
Gastric motility
Enteric nervous system
Esophageal motility
Diverticulosis and diverticulitis
Crohn disease
Ulcerative colitis
Irritable bowel syndrome
Small bowel ischemia and infarction
Bowel obstruction
Volvulus
Peutz-Jeghers syndrome
Colorectal polyps
Familial adenomatous polyposis
Juvenile polyposis syndrome
Approach to periumbilical and lower abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Approach to postoperative abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Approach to pneumoperitoneum and peritonitis (perforated viscus): Clinical sciences
Approach to upper abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Acute mesenteric ischemia: Clinical sciences
Appendicitis: Clinical sciences
Chronic mesenteric ischemia: Clinical sciences
Colonic volvulus: Clinical sciences
Diverticulitis: Clinical sciences
Infectious gastroenteritis: Clinical sciences
Inguinal hernias: Clinical sciences
Irritable bowel syndrome: Clinical sciences
Large bowel obstruction: Clinical sciences
Ischemic colitis: Clinical sciences
Rectus sheath hematoma: Clinical sciences
Small bowel obstruction: Clinical sciences
Peptic ulcer disease: Clinical sciences
Umbilical hernias: Clinical sciences
Ventral and incisional hernias: Clinical sciences
Pneumoperitoneum
Femoral hernias: Clinical sciences
Approach to abdominal wall and groin masses: Clinical sciences
Hemochromatosis: Clinical sciences
Approach to hematochezia: Clinical sciences
Approach to melena and hematemesis: Clinical sciences
Ileus: Clinical sciences
Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn disease): Clinical sciences
Inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis): Clinical sciences
Approach to constipation: Clinical sciences
Mallory-Weiss syndrome
Diffuse esophageal spasm
Esophageal web
Plummer-Vinson syndrome
Stress ulcers: Clinical sciences
Anaphylaxis: Clinical sciences

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Diverticula, or a single diverticulum, is this pouch that forms along the walls of a hollow structure in the body, kind of like a cave.

Usually we talk about these caves or pouches in the context of the large intestine, so it’d be a colonic diverticula, but it can also happen in the small intestine as well as other hollow structures in the body.

The walls of the large intestine are made up of several layers, starting with the inner layer, the mucosa, then the submucosa, then the muscle layer, and finally serosa.

Sometimes these little out-pouches include all the layers, from mucosa to serosa, and these are true diverticula, and sometimes only the mucosa and submucosa poke through the muscle layer, and these would be called pseudo or false diverticula, where the muscle layer isn’t included and the mucosa and submucosa are covered only by serosa.

Most of the time, diverticula in the large intestine are false diverticula.

It’s thought that the formation of colonic diverticula is a result of high pressures that literally push the walls such that they bubble out and form these pouches.

Now remember that the large intestine has this smooth muscle layer, right? And it’s able to contract using that muscle layer, just like any other muscle we contract, except that we can’t consciously control these because it’s smooth muscle rather than skeletal muscle.

This smooth muscle contraction accomplishes a couple things, like mixing ingested food and moving digested food toward the end of the line.

Whenever it contracts, though, higher pressures are generated inside the lumen, since it’s sort of like being squeezed and compressing the air inside, and normally you’d imagine that the higher pressure would be equally felt throughout the lumen, right?

Well, it’s thought that the contractions in patients with diverticula are exaggerated or abnormal in some way, which causes an unequal distribution of pressure with some specific areas having really high pressures during contractions.

It’s not quite clear exactly what leads to these abnormal contractions, but some studies suggest it may have to do with the smooth muscle itself.

Now let’s take a step back and think about something called Laplace’s law which says that the pressure on the wall of a cylinder is proportional to the inverse of its diameter, so as diameter decreases, pressure increases.

In other words, a really small cylinder is going to feel a lot more pressure on its walls than a really large cylinder.

Similarly, since the sigmoid colon is the smallest portion of the colon in diameter, it’s subject to relatively high pressures according the Laplace’s law, basically the spot in the large intestine where the walls get pushed on the hardest.

The sigmoid colon is therefore where most diverticula form.

Additionally, diverticula tend to form in the spots where the blood vessels that supply the intestinal walls traverses the muscle layer, this spot is slightly weaker, making it more likely for diverticula to form.

Sources

  1. "Robbins Basic Pathology" Elsevier (2017)
  2. "Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Twentieth Edition (Vol.1 & Vol.2)" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  3. "Pathophysiology of Disease: An Introduction to Clinical Medicine 8E" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  4. "CURRENT Medical Diagnosis and Treatment 2020" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2019)
  5. "Updates in Diverticular Disease" Current Gastroenterology Reports (2013)
  6. "Risk Factors for Diverticulosis, Diverticulitis, Diverticular Perforation, and Bleeding: A Plea for More Subtle History Taking" Visceral Medicine (2015)
  7. "Diverticulosis today: unfashionable and still under-researched" Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology (2015)