Peritonitis Flashcards
What’s the gold standard for diagnosing peritonitis?
ULTRASOUND (with regard to imaging…)
with regard to CONFIRMING a diagnosis of peritonitis (septic or not),
cytology: ultrasound guided sampling - AFAST*
—> degenerative neutrophils with intracellular bacteria
+culture…
How long can residual FREE air remain after abdominal surgery?
30 days!
In a dog presenting with septic peritonitis, what would we expect from effusion analysis?
peritoneal fluid glucose concentration
will always be lower
than the blood glucose concentration
If the peritoneal fluid includes a creatinine concentration greater than the serum creatinine concentration, what is the source of peritonitis?
- *urogenital**
- diagnostic for* uroperitoneum
If the peritoneal fluid bilirubin concentration is
MORE THAN 2.5X
the serum bilirubin,
what is the source of peritonitis?
Bile peritonitis 100%
What are the “big 3” antibiotics we use for treating septic peritonitis and how do we administer?
- *ampicillin** (Unasyn),
- *baytril** (amikacin can substitute),
- *metronidazole**
administer IV
What is the recommended peritoneal drainage management?
closed suction (active)
i.e. Jackson Pratt
*requires external vacuum to create negative pressure in the cavity*
What is the best feeding tube choice in a post-surgical septic peritonitis case?
Post-gastric feeding:
- *gastrojejunostomy** tube (directly in the intestinal tract and exit out body wall)
- allows for dual lumen access without the risk of making an incision in the small intestine*
How do we classify peritonitis?
- *primary** (G+ common & MONObacterial)
- Spontaneous inflammation in the absence of intraperitoneal source*
- coronavirus: FIP in cats
- hemato/lymphogenous bacT spread
- transmutation bacT migration from GIT
- bacT spread from oviducts
- *secondary (G- common & POLYmicrobial)**
- consequence of underlying 1o disease (COMMON)*
- bowel leakage/translocation
- urine/bile/blood extravasation
- neoplastic invasion
- pancreatitis (acid by-products)
if you were looking for a rupture of the GIT secondary to an NSAID, what location would we want to focus on?
what about the same situation secondary to a steroid?
proximal duodenum;
proximal descending colon
What are the 2 main offenders (from bowel) in septic peritonitis?
-
E.coli
alpha-hemolysin endotoxin - Bacteroides fragilus
(anaerobic; potentiates E.coli**)
How can we diagnose septic peritonitis in the dog and cat based on abdominal vs. serum concentrations of glucose and lactate?
Both:
glucose 20 points lower in abdominal fluid than serum
dogs only, really:
lactate 2 points higher in abdominal fluid