Bowel wall thickening
Bowel wall thickening is a useful finding on imaging studies and has a number of different causes.
Pathology
The reason for bowel wall thickening depends on the underlying etiology but includes submucosal edema, hemorrhage, and neoplastic infiltration.
Radiographic features
In describing bowel wall thickening, certain descriptors should be considered when deriving a differential diagnosis :
- bowel wall thickness
- mild, moderate, severe (subjective assessment)
- bowel wall attenuation / enhancement pattern
- length of affected segment(s)
- short segment or multiple loops
- small bowel and/or colon
- continuous involvement or discontinuous
- skip lesions
- symmetrical or asymmetrical pattern
Plain radiographs
- bowel wall thickening can be seen through thickening of the valvulae conniventes (small bowel) or haustral folds (colon)
- the true thickness of the bowel wall should not be visible
- if both sides of the bowel wall are visible, it likely indicates pneumoperitoneum
Fluoroscopy
- detection of bowel wall thickening on fluoroscopy is similar in principle to radiography and relies on evaluating the thickness of bowel wall folds
CT
- Some sources suggest >2-3 mm as a numerical cut off for small bowel wall thickening and > 5 mm for large bowel wall thickening
- CT enterography is more useful for evaluation of bowel thickening because of
- better luminal distention
- earlier contrast timing that accentuates bowel wall mucosal enhancement
MRI
Findings in MRI and MR enterography are mostly analogous to CT, but submucosal edema can be more directly evaluated with T2-weighted imaging.
Differential diagnosis
- collapsed bowel
If due to an inflammatory condition, the thickening represents submucosal edema. This type of thickening can be seen in
- inflammatory bowel disease, such as Crohn disease or ulcerative colitis
- diverticulitis
- infection, such as Clostridioides difficile (pseudomembranous colitis)
- acute mesenteric ischemia
- most prominent in venous ischemia
- radiation enteritis
Bowel wall thickening may also be due to neoplastic infiltration of the wall, such as with
- malignancy, such as colonic adenocarcinoma
- lymphoma
- graft vs. host disease
Bowel wall may be thickened in other conditions as well
- angioedema
- bowel trauma / submucosal hemorrhage
- Henoch-Schonlein purpura
- edema from hypoproteinemia
Practical points
- differentiation between collapsed bowel and pathologic bowel wall thickening may be difficult -- look for secondary signs such as mesenteric edema, vascular engorgement, lymphadenopathy, or differential bowel wall enhancement to help confirm that the bowel wall thickening is abnormal
- if trying to decide if bowel wall is thickened or just collapsed, compare the wall with other loops of bowel in nearby and distant segments