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Peritoneum and Mesentery

Peritoneum and Mesentery . Azin Shayganfar .MD. Definitions and Anatomy. Peritoneum. serosal membrane : a single layer of flat mesothelial cells supported by submesothelial connective tissue. subserosal tissue : 1-fat cells , 2- lymphatics , blood vessels

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Peritoneum and Mesentery

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  1. Peritoneum and Mesentery AzinShayganfar .MD

  2. Definitions and Anatomy

  3. Peritoneum • serosal membrane: a single layer of flat mesothelial cells supported by submesothelial connective tissue. • subserosal tissue : 1-fat cells, 2- lymphatics, blood vessels 3-inflammatory cells like lymphocytes and plasma cells.

  4. The visceral peritoneum lines all the organs that are intraperitoneal. • The parietal peritoneum lines the anterior, lateral and posterior walls of the peritoneal cavity. • The peritoneal cavity is a potential space between the parietal peritoneum, and the visceral peritoneum.

  5. The deepest portion: the pouch of Douglas in women and the retrovesical space in men both in the upright and supine position. • The cavity is closed except for the fallopian tubes and contains 50 to 75 mL of clear fluid • Peritoneal ligaments, mesentery, and omentumdivide the peritoneum into two compartments: the main region, called the greater sac, and , omental bursa, or lesser sac.

  6. 90% of peritoneal fluid is cleared at the subphrenic space by the submesotheliallymphatics.

  7. watershed regions There are in the peritoneal cavity that are areas of fluid stasis: • Ile ocolic region • Root of the sigmoid mesentery • Pouch of Douglas When you are staging a patient for GI malignancy you have to look for disease in these areas of stasis.

  8. The mesentery is a double fold of the peritoneum

  9. True mesenteries connect to the posterior peritoneal wall. 1-The small bowel mesentery 2-The transverse meso colon 3-The sigmoid mesentery • Specialized mesenteries do not connect to the posterior peritoneal wall. 1-The greater omentum: connects the stomach to the colon 2-The lesser omentum: connects the stomach to the liver 3-The meso appendix: connects the apendix to the ileum

  10. Omentum divided into the greater and lesser omentum

  11. greater omentum • originates along the margin of the greater curvature of the stomach and can cover a broad expanse of the anterior abdominal wall. • normally is usually imperceptible on routine scans exhibits fat density • infectious processes or neoplasms can increases in density and produce a mass effect on the small bowel loops.

  12. The lesser omentum is subdivided into: • Gastro hepatic ligament : connects the left lobe of the liver to the lesser curvature of the stomach. • Hepato duodenal ligament : free edge of the omentum, which contains the portal vein, hepatic artery and common bile duct .

  13. 1-The lesser omentum 2-Transverse mesocolon 3-Small bowel mesentery 4-Sigmoid mesentery

  14. Pathology OF Peritoneum and Mesentery

  15. Imaging Modalities • US: may depict peritoneal collections or ascites and is used to guide drainage of ascites and large superficial fluid collections • CT: is the most common imaging modality used to detect diseases of the peritoneum To fully delineate peritoneal anatomy and the extent of disease, we prefer to perform isotropic imaging with coronal and sagittal reformations.

  16. CT did not show: 1- microscopic lesions, masses <1CM 2- omental metastases, such as pancreatic and gastric carcinomas, that are immediately adjacent to primary masses. • A positive CT scan is a useful guide for the surgeon, but a negative study does not obviate the need for a second-look surgical procedure.

  17. biopsy of the diaphragmatic areas is the best method for the early detection of peritoneal seeding .

  18. Magnetic resonance (MRI) Disadvantages of MR imaging include: 1- motion artifacts caused by respiration and peristalsis 2- chemical shift artifacts at the bowel-mesentery interface. 3-the spatial resolution of MR imaging is lower than that of CT, a characteristic that may make it difficult to assess small peritoneal lesions. 4-Patients who are ill may not tolerate prolonged MR imaging examinations

  19. Differential Diagnosis of peritoneal mass • The first step : separate them into cystic and solid. • The secound: we have to realize that any loculated fluid collection due to abscess or as a result of pancreatitis,bowel perforation can simulate a cystic mass.Especially fluid collections in the lesser sac can simulate a cystic mass. • Lastly we have to know which cystic masses are common and look for specific features of these masses.

  20. Metastatic Disease • common with neoplasms originating in the ovary, sto mach, pancreas, and colon • Sites of Implants : 1-The falciform ligament 2- gastro hepatic ligament 3- ileo colic region 4- posterior and dependent sites of the peritoneum 5- broad ligaments

  21. diagnostic signs : rounded, ill defined, cakelike, or stellate. • If the tumor is of muci nous origin, such as the ovary or colon, it may show soft tissue or fluid density. • mucinous or other treated tumors can produce small calcifications throughout the peritoneum.

  22. Low-density mass adjacent to the falciform ligament and on the surface of the liver below the diaphragm due to metastatic ovarian cancer

  23. Mass in the hilum of the spleen due to metastatic ovarian cancer

  24. Calcined peritoneal metastases on the undersurface of diaphragm

  25. Patient with carcinoma of the pancreas has a metastatic implant adjacent to the ileocecal valve

  26. Two metastatic implants on the right and leftsides of the sigmoid mesentery

  27. extensive tumor implantation produces a thick soft tissue density displacing the colon from theanterior peritoneum.

  28. Lymphoma • NHL is the most common cause of lymphadenopathy • Usually there are other sites with lymphoma. • The CT attenuation at diagnosis is very homogeneous in most cases with minimal to no enhancement. • Heterogeneous attenuation is seen only in cases with aggressive histology or in during the treatment

  29. Carcinoid • is a slow-growing neuroendocrinetumour most commonly found in the small bowel. • Less than 10% of patients with carcinoid will develop the carcinoid syndrome • Carcinoid metastasizes to the mesentery, which at times is easier to appreciate than the primary tumor in the small bowel . • Carcinoid metastasizes to the mesentery is associated bowel wall thickening due to a desmoplastic reaction

  30. typical carcinoid with central calcification (blue arrow)Notice the bowel retraction and wall thickening

  31. Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor GIST • Primary small bowel tumors can extend into the mesentery and the typical example of that is the GIST.a large mesenteric component and such a small attachment to the bowel. • On CT they are of mixed density due to necrosis and hemorrhage and they tend to be well vascularized.

  32. Mesenteric Fibromatosisordesmoid tumor • locally aggressive but benign proliferative tumor that does not metastasize. • the small bowel mesentery is the most common site of intra-abdominal fibro matosis • Most cases are sporadic (10% to 15% occur in FAP) • About 83% of patients with mesenteric fibromatosis and FAP have a history of abdominal surgery, most commonly total colectomy. Only about 10% of patients with sporadic form have had previous abdominal surgery

  33. CT findings: a focal mesenteric mass which may have : - highly collagenousstroma(soft tissue density) • a myxoidstroma (more hypodense) • On MRI low to intermediateT1 signal and intermediateT2 signal, with variable contrast enhancement after injection

  34. Mesenteric Fibromatosis

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