Hindawi
Case Reports in Emergency Medicine
Volume 2019, Article ID 7160247, 5 pages
https://doi.org/10.1155/2019/7160247
Case Report
Acute Epiploic Appendagitis: A Nonsurgical Abdominal Pain
Marco Di Serafino ,1 Francesca Iacobellis,1 Piero Trovato,2 Ciro Stavolo,1
Antonio Brillantino ,3 Antonio Pinto,4 and Luigia Romano1
1
Department of General and Emergency Radiology, “Antonio Cardarelli” Hospital, Naples, Italy
Department of Advanced Biomedical Sciences, “Federico II” University Hospital, Naples, Italy
3
Department of Emergency Surgery, “Antonio Cardarelli” Hospital, Naples, Italy
4
Department of Radiology, Traumatology Centre “CTO-Dei Colli” Hospital, Naples, Italy
2
Correspondence should be addressed to Marco Di Serafino;
[email protected]
Received 8 April 2019; Accepted 17 June 2019; Published 14 July 2019
Academic Editor: Vasileios Papadopoulos
Copyright © 2019 Marco Di Serafino et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution
License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly
cited.
Epiploic appendagitis is a relatively rare disease characterized by an inflammation of fat-filled serosal outpouchings of the large
intestine, called epiploic appendices. Diagnosis of epiploic appendagitis is made challenging by the lack of pathognomonic clinical
features and should therefore be considered as a potential diagnosis by exclusion first of all with appendicitis or diverticulitis which
are the most important causes of lower abdominal pain. Currently, with the increasing use of ultrasound and computed tomography
in the evaluation of acute abdominal pain, epiploic appendagitis can be diagnosed by characteristic diagnostic imaging features. We
present a case of epiploic appendagitis with objective of increasing knowledge of this disease and its diagnostic imaging findings,
in order to reduce harmful and unnecessary surgical interventions.
1. Introduction
Epiploic appendagitis, also known as appendicitis epiploica,
hemorrhagic epiploitis, epiplopericolitis, or appendagitis [1–
3], is a relatively rare disease characterized by an inflammation of fat-filled serosal outpouchings of the large intestine,
called epiploic appendices [2, 4, 5]. These adipose protrusions
have normal length ranging from 5 mm to 5 cm and are
distributed on the external surface of the cecum to the rectosigmoid in a number of 50-100 [6]. They are supplied by one
or two arterioles and a single venule [7]. The appendagitis is
caused by a spontaneous torsion causing obstruction of blood
flow within the tissue and then ischemia up to a gangrenous
necrosis of the appendage or by primary thrombosis of the
draining vein and inflammation [6, 8]. The term “epiploic
appendagitis” was introduced in 1956 by Lynn et al. [3, 9]
and the computed tomography (CT) features were initially
described in 1986 by Danielson et al. [10]. The most common
sites of development of this disease are the rectosigmoid
(57%) and the ileocecum (26%); rarer sites are the ascending
(9%), transverse (6%), and descending colon (2%) [11–13].
Clinical presentation is typically characterized by acute or
subacute abdominal pain, in most cases (60–80%) in the
left lower quadrant, but it can also be localized in the right
lower quadrant [14] miming a varied number of diseases
such as appendicitis, diverticulitis, acute cholecystitis, and
omental infarction [1, 13, 14]. Unlike its mimics, epiploic
appendagitis is, generally, a self-limiting local inflammation
and can be treated with anti-inflammatory medication [1, 15–
20]. For these reasons, it is very important for clinicians to
consider epiploic appendagitis as a cause for abdominal pain
since a delay misdiagnosis can lead to prolonged hospital
stay, antibiotic therapy, and surgical interventions [1, 12].
Today, ultrasound (US) and CT scan play a crucial role in
diagnosis of this condition [16]. We present a case of epiploic
appendagitis with objective of increasing knowledge of this
disease and its US and CT findings, in order to reduce
harmful and unnecessary surgical interventions.
2. Case Report
A 45-year-old Caucasian man presented to our emergency
department (ED) with acute pain in the left iliac fossa that
2
Case Reports in Emergency Medicine
Figure 1: Spastic reflex ileum (gasless abdomen).
Figure 2: US image of the left lower quadrant with high frequency probe shows an oval noncompressible mass (calliper) with heterogeneous
echotexture, located at the point of maximum tenderness.
started the day before presentation. At clinical examination
VAS (visual analogue scale) score was 7/10. He had fever and
nausea and denied any associated chills, trauma to the area,
vomiting, dysuria, haematuria, change in bowel habits, loss
of weight, or skin rash. He also denied any history of renal
colic. His family history was positive for gallbladder diseases
requiring cholecystectomy; surgical history was negative and
no chronic diseases were reported. At physical examination
the patient showed tenderness and pain in the left iliac
fossa associated with abdominal guarding, suggestive for
diverticulitis. There was no pulsatile or palpable mass or
costovertebral angle tenderness. Physical examination was
otherwise unremarkable. The patient was placed on observation status and laboratory and diagnostic tests were ordered.
The patient was treated with an intravenous (IV) bolus of
250 mL of normal saline solution followed by 125 mL/h IV
normal saline solution and Ketorolac trometamina (Toradol
Roche Pharmaceuticals, Switzerland) 30 mg IV for pain
control. Laboratory results showed White Blood Cell (WBC)
count of 12,10 x 1000/𝜇l (4,8-10,8), with neutrophilia (87,3%)
and fibrinogen of 839 mg/dL (160-350). Chest X-ray showed
no lung consolidation, effusion, collapse, or air under the
diaphragm. Abdominal X-ray was performed showing a poor
representation of small and large bowel meteorism with no
associated pathological air-fluid levels, as from spastic reflex
ileus (Figure 1). An evaluation with abdominal US (Logiq e7
GE Healthcare, USA) was performed using a high frequency
linear probe (7,5 – 13Mhz) for the direct visualization of the
descending and sigmoid colon in the left iliac fossa, because of
the clinical suspicion of diverticulitis. US revealed a moderate
reactive bowel wall thickening of the descending and the
sigmoid colon with inflammatory change in the pericolonic
fat, appearing as adjacent oval noncompressible hyperechoic
mass, without internal vascularity and surrounded by a
subtle hypoechoic line (Figure 2). According to the clinical
conditions of the patient and the suggestive US findings, CT
(128-slice Multidetector CT scanner GE Revolution GSI,
GE Healthcare, USA) scanning of the abdomen/pelvis with
Case Reports in Emergency Medicine
3
(a)
(b)
Figure 3: Axial (a) and coronal (b) contrast enhancement CT images show an oval pericolonic fat-density nodule (arrow) with a hyperdense
ring and surrounding inflammation.
120mL IV of iomeprol contrast media (Iomeron 400 Bracco,
Italy) was also performed, confirming a moderate reactive
wall thickening of the descending and the sigmoid colon
with a nonenhancing adjacent fat-density ovoid structure
characterized by a high-density rim and a surrounding
inflammatory fat stranding (Figure 3). There was also CT
evidence of colonic diverticulosis without CT evidence of
diverticulitis. US and CT findings were most consistent
with epiploic appendagitis. The patient remained under
observation for 24 hours. Subsequently, upon symptoms
improvement, the patient was discharged with a prescription
for nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications and released
into its family doctor’s care.
3. Discussion
Epiploic appendagitis is a rare condition with an incidence of
8.8 per 1 million people and it is usually a diagnosis by exclusion [17]. Epiploic appendagitis may occur at any age. Two
retrospective studies reported that men (70%) were affected
more than women with an age range of 26 to 75 years [16]. As
stated in a previous study by Son et al., there is no association
with obesity [16, 18]. At clinical examination, patients usually
describe a localized, strong, nonmigratory, sharp pain which
usually started after a specific physical movement of their
body, like postprandial exercise. An abdominal tenderness is
present in all patients. There is a lack of fever, vomiting or
leukocytic response [16]. Diagnosis of epiploic appendagitis
is made challenging by the lack of pathognomonic clinical
features and should therefore be considered as a potential
diagnosis by exclusion. With diverticulitis and appendicitis
being the most important causes of lower abdominal pain,
they are the most frequent clinical diagnosis before diagnostic
imaging or diagnostic laparoscopy. The pain usually is located
on the left or right lower abdominal quadrant [16, 19] and,
as reported in our case, the patient showed a very suggestive
clinical finding for diverticulitis, with tenderness and pain in
the left iliac fossa associated with abdominal guarding.
Currently, thanks to the increased use of US and CT in
the evaluation of acute abdominal pain, most cases of epiploic
appendagitis are diagnosed using CT (preferred) and US
scan [20, 21]. Instead, Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
is rarely used for diagnosis. Abdominopelvic US and CT
examinations do not allow seeing the normal epiploic appendices, unless there is surrounding intraperitoneal fluid [22].
In cases of acute epiploic appendagitis, US evaluation shows,
in the patient’s area of maximal tenderness, the presence of a
small (2-4 cm in maximal diameter) rounded or ovoid, noncompressible, and hyperechoic mass adherent to the colonic
wall, without internal blood flow on color or power Doppler
studies, frequently surrounded by a subtle hypoechoic line
[11, 16, 22, 23]. The typical CT findings in cases of acute
epiploic appendagitis include the presence of rounded or
ovoid fat-density mass adjacent to the colonic wall, usually
less than 5 cm in diameter (typical diameter range: 1.5–3.5
cm) [11, 19], the “hyperattenuating/hyperdense ring sign”
[24], a hyperdense enhancing rim (thickness of 1-3 mm)
surrounding the lesion, and the perilesional inflammatory
fat stranding [11]. A pathognomonic CT finding of epiploic
appendagitis is the “central dot sign”, characterized by a
central, ill-defined round area of high attenuation within the
fat-density mass [25, 26]. This sign is also known as the “dense
central vessel sign” due to engorged or thrombosed vessel
within the inflamed epiploic appendage [27]. Although the
presence of this area of high attenuation is pathognomonic,
its absence does not preclude a diagnosis of acute epiploic
appendagitis [28].
MR may show a small oval mass with a signal intensity similar to the fat. Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted MRI
images show also an enhancing rim around the oval fatty
mass [1, 16].
The wall of the colon may show associated reactive
thickening [11].
Chronically, a calcification can develop within the infarcted appendage epiploica and may detach to form an intraperitoneal loose body (peritoneal “mice”) [29]. Rarely,
appendagitis may be located in the hernia sac [11] or involve
the vermiform appendix, mimicking appendicitis [30].
Colonoscopy is sometimes performed before CT or US
for the evaluation of abdominal colic pain; however, such a
4
procedure will not provide an explanation for the presented
symptoms in patients who have epiploic appendagitis [13]. In
our case the US and CT findings were strongly indicative for
appendagitis avoiding unnecessary invasive endoscopy.
Differential diagnosis for the imaging features of acute
epiploic appendagitis include other acute inflammatory diseases, such as acute appendicitis, acute diverticulitis and
sclerosing mesenteritis, fat-containing primary tumors or
metastasis, and acute omental infarction, each one with
characteristics imaging findings [11]. In particular, omental
infarction is described as having many pathophysiologic
similarities to epiploic appendagitis but, at CT, an omental infarction lesion is usually larger than that of epiploic
appendagitis and is cake-like, centred in the omentum, and
located medial to the cecum or ascending colon [13].
In the current literature, epiploic appendagitis is predominantly described as a self-limiting disorder and most patients
are treated conservatively and nonsurgically either with or
without nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs as our case
[13].
Case Reports in Emergency Medicine
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13]
4. Conclusion
Unlike its mimics, such as appendicitis or diverticulitis,
epiploic appendagitis is, generally, a self-limiting disease and
is treated with anti-inflammatory therapy [1, 15, 16, 20].
Currently, with the increasing use of US and CT in the evaluation of acute abdominal pain, epiploic appendagitis can be
diagnosed by characteristic diagnostic imaging features [11,
20]. For these reasons, the knowledge of epiploic appendagitis
as a cause for abdominal pain and its imaging features
may avoid a delay in diagnosis, unnecessary hospitalization,
antibiotic therapy and surgical intervention [1, 14, 16].
[14]
[15]
[16]
[17]
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare that no conflicts of interest exist.
[18]
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