The Hinchey classification for acute diverticulitis (anywhere along the bowel, not just the colon) has been variously adapted and modified since its original description, and is useful not only in academia but also in outlining successive stages of severity 3,5,6. Adoption and utility of the various modified classifications is variable, and some aspects of diverticular disease such as fistula formation or obstruction are not addressed by most classifications.
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Classification
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stage 0:
clinical: mild clinical diverticulitis
CT finding: diverticula with colonic wall thickening
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stage Ia:
clinical: confined pericolic inflammation or phlegmon
CT finding: pericolic soft tissue changes
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stage Ib:
clinical: pericolic or mesocolic abscess
CT finding: Ia changes and pericolic or mesocolic abscess
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stage II:
clinical: pelvic, distant intra-abdominal or retroperitoneal abscess
CT finding: Ia changes and distant abscess, usually deep pelvic
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stage III:
clinical: generalized purulent peritonitis
CT finding: localized or generalized ascites, pneumoperitoneum, peritoneal thickening
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stage IV:
clinical: generalized fecal peritonitis
CT finding: same as stage III
Clinical use
In general, abscesses in stage Ib and II may be drained by interventional radiology, and stage III and IV disease is managed with emergent surgery.
History
The original surgical Hinchey classification was developed in 1978, by E John Hinchey et al. 3, categorizing four stages of acute diverticulitis 7. In the 1980s, with the introduction of CT, some modifications were made to the original surgical classification system as a radiological staging system was required for the management of acute diverticulitis, leading to the most recent modification made by Kaiser et al 6 in 2005.