Ch.15 - Recognizing Extraluminal Air in the Abdomen Flashcards
3 key signs of pneumoperitoneum are:
- Air beneath the diaphragm.
- Visualization of BOTH sides of the bowel wall - Rigler sign.
- Visualization of the falciform ligament.
MCC of free air:
- Perforated peptic ulcer.
- Trauma whether accidental or iatrogenic.
- Perforated diverticulitis.
- Perforated appendicitis.
- Perforation of a colon carcinoma (rare).
Key signs of extraperitoneal (retroperitoneal) air:
- Streaky, linear appearance or a mottled, blotchy appearance outlining extraperitoneal structures and its relative fixed position.
- Moving little or not at all with changes in patient positioning.
Extraperitoneal air outlines extraperitoneal structures such as:
- Psoas muscles.
- Kidneys.
- Aorta.
- IVC.
Causes of extra-peritoneal (retroperitoneal) air include:
- Bowel perforation 2o to either inflammatory or ulcerative disease.
- Blunt or penetrating trauma.
- Iatrogenic manipulation.
- Foreign body digestion.
Key signs of air in the bowel wall include:
- Linear radiolucencies paralleling the contour of air in the adjacent bowel lumen.
- Mottled appearance that resembles air mixed with fecal material, or uncommonly, globular, cystlike collections of air that parallel the contour of the bowel.
Causes of pneumatosis intestinalis (air in the bowel wall):
- Rare primary form –> Pneumatosis cystoides intestinalis.
- More common 2o form:
a. Necrotizing enterocolitis - Infants.
b. Ischemic bowel disease - Adults.
c. Obstructing lesions of the bowel –> Hirschprung, obstructing carcinoma in adults.
Signs of air in the biliary system:
- Tubelike, branching lucencies in the RUQ overlying the liver which are central in location + few in number.
- Gas in the lumen of the gallbladder.
Causes of pneumobilia:
- Incompetence of the sphincter of Oddi.
- Prior sphincterectomy.
- Prior surgery that results in the reimplantation of the CBD into another part of the bowel.
- Gallstone ileus.
3 findings in gallstone ileus:
- Air in the biliary system.
- SBO.
- Visualization of the gallstone itself.
4 MC locations of extraluminal air are:
- Intra-peritoneal (pneumoperitoneum - frequently called free air).
- Retro-peritoneal air.
- Air in the bowel wall (pneumatosis).
- Air in the biliary system (pneumobilia).
4 MC locations of extraluminal air are:
- Intraperitoneal (pneumoperitoneum) –> Free air.
- Retroperitoneal air.
- Air in the bowel wall (pneumatosis intestinalis).
- Air in the biliary system (pneumobilia).
3 major sign of free intraperitoneal air arranged in the order in which they are most commonly seen?
- Air beneath the diaphragm.
- Visualization of BOTH sides of the BOWEL WALL.
- Visualization of the FALCIFORM LIGAMENT.
Free air is best demonstrated by …?
CT scan.
Most surveys of the abdomen begin with conventional radiographs –> Abdomen radiograph is a GOOD SCREENING.
Small amounts of air will NOT be visible on …?
Supine radiographs.
Free air is easier to recognize under the right or the left hemidiaphragm?
Under the right, because only soft tissue density of the liver is usually located there.
Free air is more difficult to see under the LEFT hemidiaphragm because …?
Air-containing structures, such as the fundus of the stomach and the splenic flexure, already reside in that location and may mask the presence of free air.
If the patient is UNABLE to stand or sit upright, then …?
Do a LEFT LATERAL DECUBITUS VIEW of the abdomen.
Free air under the right hemidiaphragm - Pitfall?
Chilaiditi syndrome.
What is Chilaiditi syndrome?
Occasionally, colon may be interposed between the dome of the liver and the right hemidiaphragm + may be mistaken for FREE AIR –> Careful search for HAUSTRAL FOLDS.
Solution for Chilaiditi syndrome?
Left lateral decubitus or CT.
Introduction of AIR into the peritoneal cavity enables us …?
To visualize the wall of the BOWEL itself since the wall is now surrounded on BOTH sides by air.