Gastroenterology
Colon Diverticulitis Treatment in Mexico
Receive evaluation for diverticulitis, abdominal pain, fever, or recurrent colon inflammation with Dr. Sergio del Hoyo’s team in Puerto Vallarta. Severe pain, fever, vomiting, or worsening symptoms require prompt medical care.
Diverticulitis ranges from mild to urgent.
- Diverticulitis occurs when small pouches in the colon become inflamed or infected.
- Treatment may include diet changes, medication, imaging, drainage, or surgery in selected cases.
- Recurrent or complicated episodes require individualized planning.
Important: Severe abdominal pain, fever, vomiting, inability to eat, fainting, or signs of peritonitis require urgent medical evaluation.
Overview
What is diverticulitis?
Diverticula are small pouches that can form in the wall of the colon. Diverticulitis happens when one or more of these pouches become inflamed or infected.
Symptoms often include lower-left abdominal pain, fever, bowel habit changes, nausea, or tenderness. Some cases are mild, while others can lead to abscess, perforation, or obstruction.
Treatment depends on severity, imaging findings, prior episodes, and overall health. Surgery may be considered for complicated or recurrent cases.
Key facts about diverticulitis
Severity varies
Some episodes can be managed medically, while complicated disease may require hospital care or surgery.
CT imaging
A CT scan may help confirm diverticulitis and identify abscess, perforation, or other complications.
Personalized plan
Treatment depends on symptoms, recurrence, complications, and surgical risk.
Symptoms
Diverticulitis symptoms patients should not ignore
Symptoms can overlap with other abdominal conditions. Medical assessment helps confirm the diagnosis and severity.
Lower abdominal pain
Pain is often felt in the lower-left abdomen but can vary.
Fever or chills
Fever may suggest infection and should be evaluated.
Bowel changes
Constipation, diarrhea, bloating, or nausea can occur during an episode.
Worsening pain
Severe or rapidly worsening pain can suggest a complication and requires urgent care.
Diagnosis
How diverticulitis is diagnosed
Diagnosis begins with symptom review, physical exam, and medical history. Blood tests may show infection or inflammation.
CT scan is often used to confirm diverticulitis and check for complications. Colonoscopy may be recommended after recovery in some patients to evaluate the colon.
What the medical team reviews
- Pain location, fever, bowel changes, previous episodes, and medications.
- Blood work, imaging results, and signs of abscess, perforation, or obstruction.
- Need for follow-up colon evaluation after inflammation improves.
Our Team
Diverticulitis care planning in Puerto Vallarta.
Diverticulitis treatment should match the severity of the episode. The team helps clarify whether the case is uncomplicated, complicated, recurrent, or needs surgical planning.
For patients who travel, timing matters. Acute symptoms should be stabilized before elective travel or planned surgery.
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions about Colon Diverticulitis
These answers explain symptoms, diagnosis, complications, surgery, recovery, and travel considerations.
What causes diverticulitis?
Diverticulitis happens when small pouches in the colon become inflamed or infected. Diet, age, bowel habits, and other factors may contribute.
How is diverticulitis diagnosed?
Diagnosis may include physical exam, blood tests, and CT scan. Imaging helps determine severity and complications.
When is diverticulitis urgent?
Severe pain, fever, vomiting, fainting, rigid abdomen, or worsening symptoms should be evaluated urgently.
Does diverticulitis always need surgery?
No. Many cases are treated medically. Surgery may be considered for complicated disease, recurrent episodes, fistula, obstruction, or perforation.
Can diverticulitis come back?
Yes, some patients have recurrent episodes. A personalized plan may reduce risk and guide follow-up.
Will I need colonoscopy?
A physician may recommend colonoscopy after recovery, especially if it has not been done recently or if symptoms require further evaluation.
What is complicated diverticulitis?
Complicated diverticulitis may involve abscess, perforation, fistula, obstruction, or peritonitis and may require hospital care.
Can I travel for diverticulitis treatment?
Stable patients may plan care, but acute severe symptoms should be treated urgently before travel decisions.
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