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| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Apr 12 2008, 4:52 AM EDT | M.J.Fuller | 16 words added, 14 words deleted |
| Apr 12 2008, 3:42 AM EDT | M.J.Fuller |
One of the the difficulties with abdominal plain film image interpretation is that a a normal appearance of the bowel can show considerable variability. This This can be attributed to congenital differences, variable amounts of bowel bowel gas, surgical and other interventions and differences associated with with activity levels of the patient. Elderly and disabled patients who are are sedentary tend to show similar bowel patterns on plain film as discussed below.
Patients who are sedentary will often show•gas-filled bowel•large bowel septa are thin, smooth and sharply marginated. (Stephen R. Baker, The Abdominal Plain Film, Appleton and Lange, 1990)
This is a supine abdominal plain film(left) of an elderly sedentary patient. patient. Compare the appearance of the large bowel with that shown below. The sedentary patient's large bowel, particularly evident in the right colon, is sharply marginated and demonstrates very thin septa (white arrow). This is in contrast to the classic appearance of haustra and plicae semilunaris as shown below. The referring doctor was concerned about the large amount of bowel gas and requested an erect abdominal view. The patient was unable to adopt the erect position and the radiographer performed a left decubitus inview lieuin lieu of the erect. The decubitus image (left) does not demonstrate air-fluid levels as expected.levels.
The distinctive appearance of the bowel in sedentary patients should not be confused with pathological appearances. It is not uncommon for this appearance to be mistaken for a motility disorder requiring additional imaging such as an erect abdominal image to check for fluid levels. levels. Radiographers who are familiar with this pattern may be able to save an elderly frail patient from the discomfort associated with an erect of or decubitus position when it is not required.
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