Clinical diagnostic of acute peritonitis

Clinical manifestations of acute peritonitis depend on:

– disease which causes the peritonitis;

– stage of peritonitis;

– spreading of peritonitis;

– characteristics of microflora;

– activity of immune response.

The diagnosis of peritonitis is usually clinical. Essentially, all patients present with some degree of abdominal pain. This pain may be acute or more insidious in onset. Initially, the pain is often dull and poorly localized (visceral peritoneum) and then progresses to steady, severe, and more localized pain (parietal peritoneum).

If the infectious process is not contained, the pain becomes diffuse. In certain disease entities (e.g., gastric perforation, severe acute pancreatitis, intestinal ischaemia), the abdominal pain may be generalized from the beginning.

Anorexia and nausea are frequently present. Vomiting may occur because of the underlying visceral organ pathology or secondary to the peritoneal irritation.

On physical examination, patients with peritonitis most often appear unwell and in acute distress. Fever with temperatures that can exceed 38 C is usually present, but patients with severe sepsis may present with hypothermia.

Tachycardia is caused by the release of inflammatory mediators and intravascular hypovolemia caused by anorexia and vomiting, fever, and third-space losses into the peritoneal cavity and bowels.

With progressive dehydration, patients may become hypotensive, they may demonstrate decreased urine output, and, with severe peritonitis, they may present septic shock.

On abdominal examination, essentially all patients demonstrate tenderness to palpation. In most patients (even with generalized peritonitis and severe diffuse abdominal pain), the point of maximal tenderness roughly overlies the pathologic process (i.e., the site of maximal peritoneal irritation).

Patients with severe peritonitis often avoid all motion and keep their hips flexed to relieve the abdominal wall tension.

The abdomen is often distended, with hypoactive-to-absent bowel sounds. This finding reflects a generalized ileus and may not be present if the infection is well localized.

Occasionally, the abdominal examination reveals an inflammatory mass. Examining the abdomen of a patient with peritonitis and mass, the patient should be supine to left lateral position for better relaxation of the abdominal wall.

Rectal examination often elicits increased abdominal pain, particularly with inflammation of the pelvic organs but rarely indicates a specific diagnosis. A tender inflammatory mass toward the right may indicate appendicitis, and anterior fullness and fluctuation may indicate a pelvic abscess. In female patients, vaginal and bimanual examination may lead to the differential diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease.

A complete physical examination is important. Thoracic processes with diaphragmatic irritation (e.g., empyema), extraperitoneal processes (e.g., pyelonephritis, cystitis, acute urinary retention), and abdominal wall processes (e.g., infection, rectus haematoma) may mimic certain signs and symptoms of peritonitis.

Always examine the patient carefully for the presence of external hernias to rule out intestinal incarceration.

Remember that the presentation and the findings on clinical examination may be entirely inconclusive or unreliable in patients with significant immunosuppression (e.g., severe diabetes, steroid use, posttransplaint status, HIV), in patients with altered mental state (e.g., head injury, toxic encephalopathy, septic shock, analgesic agents), in patients with paraplegia, and in patients of advanced age.

 

 








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