Peritonitis Flashcards
Description: What is peritonitis?
- Inflammation of the peritoneum (acute abdomen)
Aetiology/ Risk Factors: What causes peritonitis?
- Infection
Pathology: What are the possible routes of infection in peritonitis? (4)
Routes of infection:
- Perforation of GI/biliary tract
- Female genital tract
- Penetration of abdominal wall
- Haematogenous spread
Pathology: Why does generalised peritonitis occur? (3)
Generalised peritonitis occurs because:
- Contamination is too fast
- The contamination is persistent
- Abscess ruptures
Symptom: What are the symptoms of peritonitis? (6)
- Abdominal pain
- Bloating
- Diarrhoea
- Fever
- Fatigue
- Nausea and Vomiting
Signs: AAA
AAA
Investigations: What investigations do we perform for an acute abdomen (peritonitis)
(a) Ward tests (2)
(b) Blood tests (3)
(c) Imaging (3)
(a) Ward tests (urine and serum hCG are vital to exclude ectopic pregnancy)
(b) Blood tests (FBC, U+E, LFTs)
(c) Imaging (ultrasound, CT, erect chest x-ray)
Treatment: How do we manage a patient with acute abdomen (peritonitis)?
- Assess (+ resuscitate)
- Investigate
- Observe
- Treat (pain relief, antibiotics and definitive interventions such as surgery)
Complications: What are the effects of peritonitis and obstruction? (2)
- Fluid loss and SEPSIS
- These can lead to circulatory collapse and eventually DEATH
Extra: What are the 2 types of peritonitis? (2)
Which one is more severe?
2 types of peritonitis:
- Localised peritonitis
- Generalised peritonitis
(Generalised peritonitis is more severe than localised peritonitis)
Extra: Anaerobes mainly live in what organ? (peritonitis)
- Anaerobes mainly live in the colon
Extra: What is the difference between somatic pain and visceral pain? (peritonitis)
Visceral pain vs somatic pain
- Somatic pain is localised, while visceral pain is not
Extra: When assessing a patient with acute abdomen (peritonitis), what do we consider? (5)
Assessment of the patient:
- Problem?
- Effect?
- What’s to be done?
- Capacity
- Level of care needed
Extra: What is to be done for the patient during resuscitation (peritonitis)? (6)
Resuscitation:
- Ensure tissue perfusion
- Enhance tissue oxygenation
- Ensure pain relief
- Treat sepsis
- Restore circulating fluid volume
- Decompress the gut