Peritonitis, Haemoabdomen, Uroabdomen Flashcards
what measurement of glucose in abdominal free fluid is supportive of septic fluid
1mmol/l less than blood
what measurement of lactate in abdominal free fluid is supportive of septic fluid
2mmol/l more than blood
Describe how to treat peritonitis
source control key - this depends on the source
stabilise patient
antibiotic if septic - escalate vs de-escalate
describe the escalate approach to peritonitis
start with no antibiotics (or a single antibiotic e.g. amoxy clav) and wait for C+S results or patient deterioration before adding others in.
describe the de-escalate approach to peritonitis treatment
Start with double or triple combination antibiotics (e.g. amoxy-clav, metronidazole and marbofloxacin) and then reduce depending on C+S results
Describe how to diagnose haemoabdomen
POCUS
free fluid –> tap –> PCV on fluid
Blood PCV and compare
if PCV of free fluid and blood same what does this mean
haemoabdomen
ACUTE
if PCV of free fluid higher than blood what does this mean
semi acute bleed (some compensation of volume has occured)
if PCV of free fluid lower than blood what does this mean
chronic bleed e.g. cancer
describe how to treat a neoplastic bleed
If response to fluid bolus is poor -> transfusion
- Auto-transfusion vs whole blood vs pRBC + Plasma (do a met check before auto-transfusion)
definitive treatment- surgery +/- chemo
Describe how to treat blunt trauma causing haemoabdomen
WAIT
Tranexamic Acid – anti-fibrinolytic; maintains clot stability
Repeat transfusions.
Describe how to treat penetrating injury that causes a haemoabdomen
Operate – stabilise and cut, don’t wait!
Consider a staged approach – pack it and close
Tranexamic Acid – anti-fibrinolytic; maintains clot stability
describe how to treat coagulopathy caused by rat poison that causes haemoabdomen
auto-transfusion
fresh frozen plasma with vitamin K
describe the clinical signs seen with uroabdomen
abdo pain
reduced mentation
Inappropriately low heart rate- due to potassium- Very important
what history makes you think uroabdomen
Urinary signs (stranguria/dysuria)
Previous surgery (cystotomy)
Trauma (RTA)