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An enterolith is a stone-like concretion formed within the intestinal lumen by precipitation of mineral salts or inspissated intestinal contents around a nidus (such as undigested food, foreign body, or suture material).
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It may be primary (formed within the intestine) or secondary (originating outside and entering the bowel, e.g., gallstone ileus).
Etiological classification:
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Primary Enterolith | Formed within the intestinal lumen, typically in areas of stasis or abnormal motility. |
| Secondary Enterolith | Formed outside the bowel and then enters it (e.g., gallstone migrating through a biliary-enteric fistula, renal stone eroding into bowel). |
Classification
| Type | Composition | Imaging Characteristic |
|---|---|---|
| True Enteroliths | Mineral salts (calcium phosphate, calcium oxalate, magnesium ammonium phosphate) | Usually radio-opaque on X-ray |
| False Enteroliths (Phytobezoars, Fecaliths, etc.) | Indigestible material (vegetable fibers, feces, hair) | Often radiolucent, may be visible on CT or USG |
Sites of Formation