Peritonitis Flashcards

1
Q

Description: What is peritonitis?

A
  • Inflammation of the peritoneum (acute abdomen)
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2
Q

Aetiology/ Risk Factors: What causes peritonitis?

A
  • Infection
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3
Q

Pathology: What are the possible routes of infection in peritonitis? (4)

A

Routes of infection:

  • Perforation of GI/biliary tract
  • Female genital tract
  • Penetration of abdominal wall
  • Haematogenous spread
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4
Q

Pathology: Why does generalised peritonitis occur? (3)

A

Generalised peritonitis occurs because:

  • Contamination is too fast
  • The contamination is persistent
  • Abscess ruptures
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5
Q

Symptom: What are the symptoms of peritonitis? (6)

A
  • Abdominal pain
  • Bloating
  • Diarrhoea
  • Fever
  • Fatigue
  • Nausea and Vomiting
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6
Q

Signs: AAA

A

AAA

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7
Q

Investigations: What investigations do we perform for an acute abdomen (peritonitis)

(a) Ward tests (2)
(b) Blood tests (3)
(c) Imaging (3)

A

(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)

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8
Q

Treatment: How do we manage a patient with acute abdomen (peritonitis)?

A
  • Assess (+ resuscitate)
  • Investigate
  • Observe
  • Treat (pain relief, antibiotics and definitive interventions such as surgery)
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9
Q

Complications: What are the effects of peritonitis and obstruction? (2)

A
  • Fluid loss and SEPSIS

- These can lead to circulatory collapse and eventually DEATH

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10
Q

Extra: What are the 2 types of peritonitis? (2)

Which one is more severe?

A

2 types of peritonitis:

  • Localised peritonitis
  • Generalised peritonitis

(Generalised peritonitis is more severe than localised peritonitis)

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11
Q

Extra: Anaerobes mainly live in what organ? (peritonitis)

A
  • Anaerobes mainly live in the colon
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12
Q

Extra: What is the difference between somatic pain and visceral pain? (peritonitis)

A

Visceral pain vs somatic pain

- Somatic pain is localised, while visceral pain is not

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13
Q

Extra: When assessing a patient with acute abdomen (peritonitis), what do we consider? (5)

A

Assessment of the patient:

  • Problem?
  • Effect?
  • What’s to be done?
  • Capacity
  • Level of care needed
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14
Q

Extra: What is to be done for the patient during resuscitation (peritonitis)? (6)

A

Resuscitation:

  • Ensure tissue perfusion
  • Enhance tissue oxygenation
  • Ensure pain relief
  • Treat sepsis
  • Restore circulating fluid volume
  • Decompress the gut
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