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Diverticulum

Abstract

A diverticulum (plural: "diverticula") is the medical or biological term for an outpouching of a hollow (or a fluid-filled) structure in the body. Depending upon which layers of the structure are involved, they are described as being either true or false.

In medicine, the term usually implies the structure is not normally present. However, in the embryonic stage, some normal structures begin development as a diverticulum arising from another structure.

Anatomical

Guttural pouch: A large (300-500 ml), paired, air-filled ventral diverticulum of the auditory tube found in horses and other Perissodactyla.

Classification

Diverticula are described as being true or false depending upon the layers involved:

- True diverticula involve all layers of the structure, including muscularis propria and adventitia, such as Meckel's diverticulum.

- False diverticula (also known as "pseudodiverticula") do not involve muscular layers or adventitia. False diverticula, in the GI tract for instance, involve only the submucosa and mucosa.

Human pathology

Diverticula may occur in one of the three areas of the esophagus - the pharyngoesophageal, the midesophageal area or the epiphrenic area of esophagus. Zenker's diverticulum is found three times more frequently in men than in women. It occurs posteriorly through the cricopharyngeal muscle in the midline of the neck. Usually seen in people older than 60 years of age.

- Gastric diverticula - "Although usually asymptomatic, they may cause vague epigastric pain. These lesions may be confused radiologically for gastric ulcers or cancers. Endoscopically, they may be confused for paraesophageal hernias."

- Killian-Jamieson diverticulum

- Meckel's diverticulum: a persistent portion of the omphalomesenteric duct present in 2% of the population

- Rokitansky-Aschoff sinuses: in the gallbladder due to chronic cholecystitis

- Traction esophageal diverticulum: due to scarring from mediastinal or pulmonary tuberculosis

- Urethral diverticulum: congenital in males, post-infectious in females

- Zenker's diverticulum: a diverticulum of the mucosa of the pharynx affecting adults

Most of these pathological types of diverticulum are capable of harboring an enterolith. If the enterolith stays in place, it may cause no problems, but a large enterolith expelled from a diverticulum into the lumen can cause obstruction.