Peritonitis Flashcards

1
Q

def

A

inflammation of peritoneal lining of abdominal cavity

localised or generalised

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2
Q

is generalised peritonitis primary or secondary

A

both

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3
Q

aetiology of localised

A

1 appendicitis
2 cholecystitis
3 diverticulitis

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4
Q

aetiology of primary generalised

A

bacterial infection of peritoneal cavity
1 spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
2 renal failure patients with CPAD

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5
Q

what is spontaneous bacterial peritonitis associated with

A

cirrhosis

ascites

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6
Q

what is CPAD

A

continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis

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7
Q

aetiology of secondary generalised

A

usually spreads from other source of infection

e.g. perforated peptic ulcer, pancreatic secretions

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8
Q

epi

A

localised and secondary generalised are common

primary generalised is rare (adolescent females)

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9
Q

history

A

1 parietal pain

  • continuous
  • sharp
  • exacerbated by movement or coughing
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10
Q

examination of localised

A

1 tenderness with involuntary guarding

2 rebound tenderness

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11
Q

examination of generalised

A

1 patient very unwell, systemic signs (fever, tachycardia)
2 movement exacerbates pain
3 generalised guarding and rebound tenderness

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12
Q

what would you expect to hear from the bowel sounds in generalised peritonitis

A

reduced or absent (paralytic ileus)

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13
Q

investigations

A
1 bloods
2 erect CXR for pneumoperitoneum
3 AXR for bowel obstruction
4 CT abdomen/laparoscopy
-to diagnose cause of peritonitis
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14
Q

what is pneumoperitoneum

A

abnormal presence of air in peritoneal cavity

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15
Q

what would be looked for in bloods

A
  • FBC
  • UEs
  • LFTs
  • amylase (exclude pancreatitis)
  • CRP (for inflammation)
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16
Q

what happens to the greater omentum in peritonitis

A

sticks to inflamed organ to prevent spread

17
Q

how would ascites be investigated and what could it diagnose

A

1 ascitic tap and cell count

2 SBP >250neutrophils/mm3

18
Q

management of localised

A

dependent on cause:
appendicectomy in appendicitis
IV antibiotics in cholecystitis, diverticulitis)

19
Q

management of generalised

A

IV fluids, electrolytes, antibiotics to protect against sepsis + shock
monitor fluid balance
surgical intervention

20
Q

when would an urgent laparotomy be performed

A

identify + treat cause

remove infected or necrotic tissue

21
Q

management of primary peritonitis

A

antibiotics

22
Q

complications

A

1 septic shock
2 multi-organ failure
3 paralytic ileus

23
Q

prognosis

A

localised peritonitis usually resolves with treatment

generalised peritonitis has high mortality rate (higher with sepsis + multi-organ failure)