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  2. Gastrointestinal wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastrointestinal_wall

    Invasion of tumours through the layers of the gastrointestinal wall is used in staging of tumour spread. This affects treatment and prognosis. The normal thickness of the small intestinal wall is 3–5 mm, [6] and 1–5 mm in the large intestine. [7] Focal, irregular and asymmetrical gastrointestinal wall thickening suggests a malignancy. [7]

  3. Segmental colitis associated with diverticulosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segmental_colitis...

    Fecal calprotectin, a marker of colon inflammation, may be elevated. Computed tomography of the abdomen is not routinely necessary, but may show thickening or inflammation in the distal colon (sigmoid colon) with associated diverticulosis. Treatment may consist of antibiotics, aminosalicylates (mesalamine), or prednisone. In rare cases, surgery ...

  4. Diverticulitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diverticulitis

    Besides, bowel wall oedema with adjacent hyperechoic mesentery can also be seen on ultrasound. However, CT scan is the mainstay of diagnosing diverticulitis and its complications. [12] The diagnosis of acute diverticulitis is made confidently when the involved segment contains diverticula. [42] CT images reveal localized colon wall thickening ...

  5. Gastrointestinal disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastrointestinal_disease

    The normal thickness of the small intestinal wall is 3–5 mm, [8] and 1–5 mm in the large intestine. [9] Focal, irregular and asymmetrical gastrointestinal wall thickening on CT scan suggests a malignancy. [9] Segmental or diffuse gastrointestinal wall thickening is most often due to ischemic, inflammatory or infectious disease. [9]

  6. Diverticulosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diverticulosis

    Diverticulosis is the condition of having multiple pouches (diverticula) in the colon that are not inflamed. These are outpockets of the colonic mucosa and submucosa through weaknesses of muscle layers in the colon wall. [1] Diverticula do not cause symptoms in most people. [2]

  7. Upper gastrointestinal series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_gastrointestinal_series

    Anisakiasis is demonstrated by Barium X-rays as bowel wall oedema, thickening, ulceration, or stricture due to inflammation. Sometimes worms are seen as long, thread-like, linear filling defects up to 30 cm long. [33] In Typhlitis Barium studies show oedema, ulceration, and inflammation of bowel wall resulting in wall thickening. [33]

  8. Intestinal ischemia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intestinal_ischemia

    Bowel dilatation [29] Bowel wall thickening [29] Intestinal mesenteric stranding [32] Evidence of adjacent solid organ infarctions to the kidney or spleen, consistent with a cardiac embolic shower phenomenon; In embolic acute intestinal ischemia, CT-Angiography can be of great value for diagnosis and treatment.

  9. Fibrosing colonopathy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibrosing_colonopathy

    The afflicted colon's histologic findings include thickening of the muscularis propria, submucosal fibrosis, a cobblestone-like appearance, and persistent mucosal inflammation. [8] With relative rectal sparing, imaging can demonstrate diffuse narrowing, shortening, and loss of haustration of the colonic lumen.