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A 62-year-old man presents to the emergency department with acute-onset left lower quadrant abdominal pain. He is mildly tachycardic but is otherwise hemodynamically stable. On abdominal examination, he has diffuse peritonitis. Laparoscopy reveals sigmoid diverticulitis with purulent fluid throughout the abdomen without fecal contamination. What is the best next step in management?
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Citation
"" ASCRS Question Bank, ASCRS U, www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717102/all/Benign_Disease. Accessed 22 April 2026.
ASCRS Question Bank. https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717102/all/Benign_Disease. Accessed April 22, 2026.
In ASCRS Question Bank https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717102/all/Benign_Disease
[Internet]. In: ASCRS Question Bank. [cited 2026 April 22]. Available from: https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717102/all/Benign_Disease.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
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T1 -
ID - 3717102
BT - ASCRS Question Bank
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DB - ASCRS U
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -
ASCRS Question Bank

