Facts:
- Uncommon injury in blunt trauma
 - Severe direct force is usually required to produce this injury, mostly from motor vehicle collision
 - Often associated with other injuries, both intra- (liver, spleen, small bowel mesentery) and extra-abdominal (skeletal, facial, neurologic)
 - CT may not be 100% sensitive. Findings could be overlooked in multiply-injured patients, large patients or if metallic monitoring/support devices are obscuring the area.
 - "Normal" CT could be misleading when other factors such as physical examination is not taken into account. Re-review of images to look for subtle free fluid/air is essential in these cases.
 
- Discontinuity of bowel wall
 - Extraluminal contrast leakage
 - Extraluminal air either intra- or retroperitoneal (nonspecific, can be seen after DPL, mechanical ventilation, barotrauma, etc)
 - Intramural air
 - Bowel wall thickening
 - Bowel wall enhancement
 - Mesenteric fat stranding
 - Intraperitoneal and retroperitoneal fluid
 
References:
- Barden BE et al. Perforation of the colon after blunt trauma. South Med J 2000;93(1)
 - Brody JM, et al. CT of blunt trauma bowel and mesenteric injury: typical findings and pitfalls in diagnosis. RadioGraphics 2000;20: 1525
 






