Due to the variety of symptoms experienced by patients with omental caking, After omental cakes have been identified on CT or ultrasound, it may be appropriate to gain more information on the characteristics of the disease by undergoing
nuclear medicine scans that can identify tissues where the cancerous cells may have spread or
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for a higher degree of spatial resolution. Suspected infectious etiologies may require another degree of medical testing including blood antigen or antibody analysis. Yet, in both malignant and infectious cases, image-guided
biopsy with pathologic correlation is the most definitive way to confirm the diagnosis. During surgery, the presence of omental caking makes incomplete resection more likely. In patients where omental spread is completely removed, intestinal resections are more likely to be encountered due to the caked omentum's propensity for spreading malignancy to adjacent organs. == Mimics ==