Long-term management of diverticulitis in young patients

Abstract
This study was designed to determine the natural history of documented diverticulitis that resolves after treatment with intravenous antibiotics and bowel rest in patients under the age of 50. Records of 40 patients aged 50 or under who were hospitalized with the diagnosis of acute diverticulitis between 1980 and 1984 were reviewed to obtain data regarding how the diagnosis was made. Patients successfully treated with antibiotics were contacted five to nine years after their attack and surveyed via telephone questionnaire about symptoms, recurrent attacks, and surgical interventions. A total of 40 patients were included in the study. Ten patients (25 percent) required surgery during initial admission, and 30 patients were discharged with resolution of their symptoms after treatment with intravenous antibiotics and bowel rest. A five-year to nine-year follow-up was obtained on patients treated medically, one-third of whom underwent operation for diverticulitis during this period, and two-thirds of whom did not require surgery during the follow-up period. All operations were elective with single-stage resections. Based on our data, we do not recommend surgery in this population after a single episode of diverticulitis that resolves after treatment with antibiotics.