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Apex Nursing

Reference — Gastrointestinal

Diverticulosis vs Diverticulitis Reference

Same pouches, two very different states — and the fiber advice flips between them. The whole reference hinges on one idea: fiber prevents, bowel rest treats.

Educational use only. Diet advancement and antibiotic decisions in a flare follow provider orders; complicated diverticulitis needs surgical evaluation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Side by Side

FeatureDiverticulosisDiverticulitis
What it isPresence of diverticula (out-pouchings of colon wall), usually sigmoidInflammation/infection of one or more diverticula
SymptomsUsually asymptomatic; may have mild bloating or irregular bowelsLLQ pain, fever, nausea, change in bowel habit, possible palpable mass
DietHIGH-fiber to keep stool soft and prevent flaresBowel rest in a flare: clear liquids → low-fiber/low-residue, advance as it settles
Key riskLow-fiber diet, chronic constipation, aging, obesityUntreated → abscess, perforation, peritonitis, fistula, obstruction, bleeding

The Flipped Fiber Rule

When well (diverticulosis): high fiber + fluids keep stool soft and pressure low, preventing flares. During a flare (acute diverticulitis): rest the bowel — clear liquids and a low-fiber/low-residue diet while inflamed, advancing back to high fiber only as symptoms resolve. Giving high fiber during an acute flare is a classic wrong answer.

Flare Management & Complications

Uncomplicated diverticulitis: bowel rest, pain control, and antibiotics as ordered, often outpatient. Watch for the complications that turn it surgical — abscess, perforation and peritonitis, fistula (classically colovesical → pneumaturia/fecaluria), obstruction, and significant lower GI bleeding. Avoid the urge to give laxatives/enemas during an acute flare.

The seeds-and-nuts myth: older teaching to avoid nuts, seeds, popcorn, and corn is not supported by evidence — they don’t cause flares and need not be restricted long-term.

NCLEX Pearls

  • DiverticulOSIS = pouches present (often asymptomatic); diverticulITIS = inflamed/infected.
  • Fiber flips: HIGH fiber to prevent (when well), LOW fiber/bowel rest during an acute flare.
  • Classic diverticulitis = LLQ pain + fever ('left-sided appendicitis').
  • Watch for perforation/peritonitis, abscess, fistula (pneumaturia), obstruction, and bleeding.
  • The nuts/seeds/popcorn restriction is a myth — not evidence-based.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) / AGA · ASPEN (nutrition support). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →