Gastrointestinal perforation CT

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[{CMG}}; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Mohammed Abdelwahed M.D[1]

Overview

Chest CT

  • When fluoroscopy is equivocal, and there is persisting suspicion of perforation.
  • extraluminal gas locules in the mediastinum or abdominal cavity, adjacent to the esophagus are highly suggestive 2, 4
  • pleural or mediastinal fluid
  • pneumomediastinum or pneumothorax
  • pericardial or pleural effusions can be seen Water soluble oral contrast can be administered 20 minutes before scanning to demonstrate extravasation. Intravenous contrast is usually administered to delineate the oesophageal wall (25 - 60-second delay) 8.

Abdominal CT

  • Signs of perforation on abdominal CT scanning include extraluminal air (image 6); extraluminal oral contrast; free fluid or food collections; and discontinuity of the intestinal wall, fistula, or intra-abdominal abscess often associated with irregular adjacent bowel wall thickening [82,93,99,100].
  • this is the primary imaging modality for detection and localization of bowel perforation
  • the site of the perforation can often be localized by:
  • tracking the bubbles of pneumoperitoneum toward a region of the bowel
  • looking for localized peritoneal fat stranding or bowel wall thickening o determining a site of bowel wall discontinuity
  • if the patient received oral contrast, then often the leak can be seen directly as contrast spills out of the perforation site
  • if a suspected bowel perforation is the primary indication for the study, then protocolling the study with a water-soluble contrast medium is useful
  • if a bowel perforation occurs due to obstruction, the perforation usually occurs at the site of maximal bowel distention and the perforation may be distant from the actual cause of the bowel obstruction
  • a bowel perforation may not result in pneumoperitoneum, but liquid contents exiting the bowel may form a phlegmon or abscess

References