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25 November 2025 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Tripartite research collaboration session - Alexander Hawkins at ESCP Paris 2025
24 November 2025 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Willem Bemelman (for) and Charles Sabbagh (against) at ESCP Paris 2025
New Trials Forum - Charles Sabbagh at ESCP Paris 2025
21 November 2025 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Free paper - Helene Rask Dalby at ESCP Paris 2025
29 November 2024 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Oral visual poster presentation - Arslan Pannu (UK) at ESCP Thessaloniki 2024
23 November 2023 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Global Symposium - Luqman Mazlan (Malaysia) at ESCP Vilnius 2023
Global Symposium - Dale Vimalachandran (United Kingdom) at ESCP Vilnius 2023
Cecilia Dahlbäck (Sweden) at ESCP Vilnius 2023
21 November 2023 By Anonymous In Diverticular Disease
Video session - Eleanor Rudge (United Kingdom) at ESCP Vilnius 2023
21 November 2023 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Education session - Ailsa Hart (United Kingdom) at ESCP Vilnius 2023
02 November 2022 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Global symposium - Surendra Mantoo (Singapore) at ESCP Dublin 2022
01 November 2022 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Educational session - Ioannis Papaconstantinou (Greece), Antonios Gklavas (Greece) at ESCP Dublin 2022
26 October 2022 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Cohorts and Audits Symposium - Johanna Sigurdardottir (Sweden) at ESCP Dublin 2022
Cohorts and Audits Symposium - Dale Vimalachandran (UK) at ESCP Dublin 2022
Educational session - Baljit Singh (UK) at ESCP Dublin 2022
26 January 2022 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Educational session - Mark Potter (UK) and Tine Gregoir, Trainee (UK) at ESCP Barcelona 2021
25 January 2022 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Guideline-based discussion - Eva Angenete (Sweden) at ESCP Barcelona 2021
22 September 2020 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Top abstract 4 - Laura Mora-López (Spain) at ESCP Virtually Vilnius 2020
21 September 2020 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Educational session - Eva Angenete (Sweden) at ESCP Virtually Vilnius 2020
19 November 2019 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Educational session - Johannes Schultz (Norway) at ESCP Vienna 2019
04 November 2019 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Educational session - Sebastiano Biondo (Spain) at ESCP Vienna 2019
One of the Six Best Free Papers - Najia Azhar (Sweden) at ESCP Vienna 2019
27 November 2018 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Educational session - Sebastiano Biondo (Spain) at ESCP Nice 2018
18 October 2018 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
New Trials Forum - Dale Vimalachandran (UK) at ESCP Nice 2018
13 November 2017 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Educational session - Marja A Boermeester (The Netherlands) at ESCP Berlin 2017
Educational session - Goran Barisic (Serbia) at ESCP Berlin 2017
18 May 2017 By European Manual of Medicine: Coloproctology In Diverticular Disease
Colonic diverticulosis is among the most common diseases in developed Western countries, and its incidence is increasing as the average age of the population increases. Its etiology remains largely unknown. It is assumed that intestinal innervation disorders and structural alterations of the musculature induce abnormal contractile patterns with increased intraluminal pressure, thereby promoting the development of diverticula. The location of diverticula within the colon varies significantly among different regions of the world. In Western countries, primarily left-sided diverticulosis, particularly involving the sigmoid colon, has been well-described. This is in contrast to findings in Asia, where right-sided diverticulosis dominates. The actual prevalence of diverticulosis is difficult to determine because most individuals are asymptomatic. Acquired diverticular disease of the colon has been estimated to occur in 30 % of the population over the age of 45 years; 10–25 % of these individuals develop symptomatic diverticulitis. The clinical spectrum of diverticular disease varies from asymptomatic diverticulosis to symptomatic disease with potentially fatal complications, such as perforation or bleeding. Acute diverticulitis is treated according to severity. Computed tomography permits the complete evaluation of the location and extent of the inflammatory process, allowing appropriate, adapted clinical management. Treatment recommendations depend on the disease stage and include conservative approaches with observation and dietary modifications, as well as antibiotic treatment, abscess drainage, and surgery. A prerequisite for therapeutic decision making is an exact, comprehensive, and applicable classification of the disease before treatment. Several systems for classifying diverticular disease have been presented, but none of them has yet been universally adopted.
03 November 2016 By ESCP Secretariat In Diverticular Disease
Symposium - Nikolas Gouvas at ESCP Milan 2016
Symposium - Tom Øresland at ESCP Milan 2016