Peritonitis

Background

  • Inflammation of serosal membrane lining abdominal cavity and intraabdominal organ
  • Infectious or sterile (mechanical, chemical)
  • Primary: Hematogenous, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP)
  • Secondary: Perforation or trauma, most common
  • Tertiary: Persistent/recurrent infection

Clinical Features

Differential Diagnosis

Diffuse Abdominal pain

Diagnosis

  • Clinical diagnosis
  • CBC (leukocytosis), chem, coags, albumin
  • Other test: LFT, lipase, UA, Stool sample
  • Abdominal Xray (supine, upright, lateral decubitus)- free air?
  • US, CT a/p
  • Diagnostic paracentesis to r/o SBP: PMN ≥ 250 cells/mm³

Management

  • Fluid resuscitation
  • Surgical consult
  • IR consult if requiring abscess drainage

Antibiotics

Intra-Abdominal Sepsis/Peritonitis

Harbor-UCLA Santa Monica-UCLA Other
Primary
Allergy or prior exposure

See Also

External Links

Sources

Daley BJ, et al. (2014, Sep 25). Peritonitis and Abdominal Sepsis. eMedicine. Retrieved 12/25/2014 from http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/180234-overview