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Visceral to subcutaneous fat ratio predicts acuity of diverticulitis

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Abstract

Introduction

There is an association between obesity and more complicated diverticular disease. We hypothesize that this link may be due to an increased level of visceral fat rather than an elevated body mass index alone. Adipose tissue secretes inflammatory cytokines, and chronic inflammation may account for the link between obesity and a more severe presentation of diverticular disease. We have applied a quantitative measure of visceral fat content in a series of patients admitted with diverticulitis, comparing those who required emergent versus elective surgical procedures for diverticulitis.

Methods

We performed a retrospective review of all adult patients who underwent emergent or elective surgery at our institution for diverticulitis from 2010 to 2014. Data were collected on demographics, comorbidities, operative findings, complications, and length of stay. Radiologic measurements of adiposity were obtained from preoperative CT scans. Visceral fat areas and subcutaneous fat areas were measured, and the V/S ratio was calculated.

Results

Thirty-four patients underwent emergent and 32 patients underwent elective surgery. The mean age was 66.3 years for the emergent and 57.11 for the elective group (p = 0.04178). The perinephric, visceral, subcutaneous fat, and V/S ratio for the emergent group were 1.71, 185.22, 338.22, and 0.56 and were 1.11, 127.18, 295.28, and 0.46 for the elective group. The difference between the V/S ratio for each group was significant (p = 0.0238). The emergent group had an average LOS of 16.11 days compared to 5.15 for the elective group (p = <0.00001). The complication rate was significantly higher (p = 0.024) in the emergent group (n = 12, 35.2 %) compared to the elective group (n = 4, 12.5 %).

Conclusion

Our study demonstrates a clinically significant link between visceral fat and severity of presentation of diverticulitis. Patients with higher V/S fat ratios were more likely to require emergency surgery and have more complications and a longer LOS.

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Correspondence to Salvatore Docimo Jr..

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Disclosures

Dr. Docimo, Young Lee, Prav Chatani, Dr. Rogers, and Dr. Lacqua have no conflicts of interest or financial ties to disclose.

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Docimo, S., Lee, Y., Chatani, P. et al. Visceral to subcutaneous fat ratio predicts acuity of diverticulitis. Surg Endosc 31, 2808–2812 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00464-016-5290-2

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00464-016-5290-2

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