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Small bowel diverticular disease

Last updated: November 24, 2025

Summarytoggle arrow icon

Small bowel diverticular disease encompasses small bowel diverticulosis and small bowel diverticulitis. In small bowel diverticulosis, one or more diverticula form through the small bowel wall, most commonly the duodenum. Small bowel diverticulosis is more common in adults ≥ 40 years of age and is either congenital or acquired, with causes of acquired small bowel diverticulosis thought to include increased intraluminal pressure or intestinal dyskinesia. Patients are usually asymptomatic but may present with chronic, nonspecific symptoms (e.g., abdominal pain, fever, diarrhea) and/or GI bleeding. Complications can be severe and include small bowel diverticulitis, severe hemorrhage, mechanical bowel obstruction, and pancreaticobiliary disorders. Diagnosis is typically based on imaging findings. Management depends on the clinical presentation. Asymptomatic patients require no treatment. Complications such as perforation, abscess, or severe hemorrhage often require surgery. Small bowel diverticulitis is the inflammation of one or more diverticula in the small bowel and is typically caused by diverticular obstruction. It is a complication of small bowel diverticulosis, most commonly jejunoileal diverticulosis, and usually affects older adults. Clinical features are often nonspecific (e.g., abdominal pain, fever, vomiting), and the differential diagnosis includes other causes of acute abdomen. Diagnosis is based on imaging findings (e.g., peridiverticular edema, diverticular wall thickening). Management depends on severity; patients with mild, uncomplicated cases are treated conservatively with bowel rest and broad-spectrum antibiotics. Surgery is the definitive treatment and is indicated for complications such as perforation, abscess, and obstruction.

This article only addresses acquired small bowel pseudodiverticula. For information on congenital true diverticula of the small bowel, see "Meckel diverticulum."

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Overviewtoggle arrow icon

Overview of small bowel diverticular disease [1][2][3]
Small bowel diverticulosis Small bowel diverticulitis
Definition
Epidemiology
  • More common in adults ≥ 40 years
  • Typically detected in 6th or 7th decade of life
Clinical features
Diagnostics
  • CT is the preferred modality for suspected complications.
  • CT findings (uncomplicated):
  • Double balloon endoscopy to identify source of bleeding
  • CT with IV and oral contrast is the modality of choice.
  • CT findings include:
    • Peridiverticular inflammation (e.g., fat stranding)
    • Diverticular wall thickening
    • Inflammation more pronounced on mesenteric border
Management
Complications

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Diagnostic approachtoggle arrow icon

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Small bowel diverticulosistoggle arrow icon

Definition [1][2]

Epidemiology

  • Incidence [1]
  • More common in adults ≥ 40 years of age [2]
  • Typically detected in the 6th or 7th decade of life [2]
  • No definitive sex predilection [1][2]

Etiology [1]

Clinical features [1][2]

Patients with jejunoileal diverticulosis are more likely to have persistent symptoms and acute complications than duodenal diverticulosis. [1]

Diagnosis [1][2]

Accurate diagnosis typically requires a strong level of clinical suspicion.

Imaging

Laparotomy

  • Gold standard
  • Not the preferred modality as it is invasive

Diagnosis of bleeding from small bowel diverticula

Avoid oral contrast in patients with an acute GI bleed as it may interfere with therapeutic endoscopy or angiography. [1]

Differential diagnoses [2]

Management [1][2]

Complications [1][2]

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Small bowel diverticulitistoggle arrow icon

Definition [1][2]

  • The inflammation of one or more small bowel diverticula (most commonly jejunoileal diverticula)
  • Caused by stasis of contents within the diverticulum, resulting in venous outflow obstruction and infection

Epidemiology [3]

Etiology [1][2][3]

Clinical features [1][2][3]

Presentation is often nonspecific and can mimic other causes of an acute abdomen.

Diagnosis [1][2][3]

  • CT abdomen, typically with intravenous and oral contrast, is the imaging modality of choice.
  • Findings:
    • Signs of peridiverticular inflammation (e.g., peridiverticular edema and fat stranding, diverticular wall thickening)
    • Inflammation is typically more pronounced along the mesenteric border (sparing of the antimesenteric side).
    • "Fecalized diverticulum" sign: fecalized content within the inflamed diverticulum

Differential diagnoses [1][2][3]

Management [1][2][3]

Complications [1][2][3]

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