:''This article is concerned with peritonitis in human beings. For a specific cause of peritonitis in cats, see
feline infectious peritonitis.''
'Peritonitis' is defined as
inflammation of the
peritoneum (the
serous membrane which lines part of the
abdominal cavity and some of the
viscera it contains). It may be localised or generalised, generally has an acute course, and may depend on either
infection (often due to rupture of a hollow
viscus) or on a non-infectious process. Peritonitis generally represents a
surgical emergency.
Mechanisms & manifestations
Abdominal pain & tenderness
The main manifestations of peritonitis are acute 'abdominal
pain,
tenderness, and
guarding', which are exacerbated by moving the peritoneum, e.g. coughing, flexing the hips, or eliciting the
Blumberg sign (a.k.a.
rebound tenderness, meaning that pressing a hand on the abdomen elicits pain, but releasing the hand abruptly will aggravate the pain, as the peritoneum snaps back into place). The localisation of these manifestations depends on whether peritonitis is localised (e.g.
appendicitis or
diverticulitis before perforation), or generalised to the whole
abdomen; even in the latter case, pain typically starts at the site of the causing disease. Peritonitis is an example of
acute abdomen.
Collateral manifestations
★ Diffuse abdominal rigidity ("
washboard abdomen") is often present, especially in generalised peritonitis;
★
Fever;
★
Sinus tachycardia;
★ Development of
ileus paralyticus (i.e. intestinal paralysis), which also causes
nausea and
vomiting;
Complications
★ Sequestration of
fluid and
electrolytes, as revealed by decreased
central venous pressure, may cause
electrolyte disturbances, as well as significant
hypovolaemia, possibly leading to
shock and
acute renal failure.
★ A
peritoneal abscess may form (e.g. above or below the
liver, or in the lesser
omentum).
★
Sepsis may develop, so
blood cultures should be obtained.
★ the fluid may push on the diaphragm and cause breathing difficulties
Diagnosis and investigations
A
diagnosis of peritonitis is based primarily on clinical grounds, that is on the clinical manifestations described above; if they support a strong suspicion of peritonitis, no further investigation should delay
surgery.
Leukocytosis and
acidosis may be present, but they are not specific findings. A plain
abdominal X-rays may reveal dilated, oedematous intestines, although it is mainly useful to look for
pneumoperitoneum (free air in the peritoneal cavity), which may also be visible on a
chest X-rays. If reasonable doubt still persists, an exploratory
peritoneal lavage may be performed (e.g. in cause of
trauma, in order to look for
white blood cells,
red blood cells, or
bacteria).
Causes
Infected peritonitis
★ 'Perforation of a hollow viscus' is the most common cause of peritonitis. Examples include perforation of the distal
oesophagus (
Boerhaave syndrome), of the
stomach (
peptic ulcer,
gastric carcinoma, of the
duodenum (
peptic ulcer), of the remaining
intestine (e.g.
appendicitis,
diverticulitis,
Meckel diverticulum,
IBD,
intestinal infarction, intestinal strangulation,
colorectal carcinoma,
meconium peritonitis), or of the
gallbladder (
cholecystitis). Other possible reasons for perforation include
trauma, ingestion of sharp
foreign body (such as a fish bone), perforation by an
endoscope or
catheter, and anastomotic leakage. The latter occurrence is particularly difficult to diagnose early, as
abdominal pain and
ileus paralyticus are considered normal in patients who just underwent
abdominal surgery. In most cases of perforation of a hollow viscus, mixed
bacteria are isolated; the most common agents include
Gram-negative bacilli (e.g. ''
Escherichia coli'') and
anaerobic bacteria (e.g. ''
Bacteroides fragilis'').
★ 'Disruption of the
peritoneum', even in the absence of perforation of a
hollow viscus, may also cause infection simply by letting
micro-organisms into the peritoneal cavity. Examples include
trauma,
surgical wound, continuous ambulatory
peritoneal dialysis, intra-peritoneal
chemotherapy. Again, in most cases mixed
bacteria are isolated; the most common agents include cutaneous species such as ''
Staphylococcus aureus'', and
coagulase-negative
staphylococci, but many others are possible, including
fungi such as
Candida.
★ 'Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis' (SBP) is a peculiar form of peritonitis occurring in the absence of an obvious source of contamination. It occurs either in
children, or in patients with
ascites. See the article on
spontaneous bacterial peritonitis for more information.
★ 'Systemic infections' (such as
tuberculosis) may rarely have a peritoneal localisation.
Non-infected peritonitis
★ 'Leakage of
sterile body fluids into the peritoneum', such as
blood (e.g.
endometriosis, blunt abdominal
trauma),
gastric juice (e.g.
peptic ulcer,
gastric carcinoma),
bile (e.g.
liver biopsy),
urine (pelvic
trauma),
menstruum (e.g.
salpingitis),
pancreatic juice (
pancreatitis), or even the contents of a ruptured
dermoid cyst. It is important to note that, while these
body fluids are sterile at first, they frequently become infected once they leak out of their organ, leading to infectious peritonitis within 24-48h.
★ 'Sterile abdominal surgery' normally causes localised or minimal generalised peritonitis, which may leave behind a
foreign body reaction and/or fibrotic
adhesions. Obviously, peritonitis may also be caused by the rare, unfortunate case of a
sterile foreign body inadvertently left in the
abdomen after
surgery (e.g.
gauze,
sponge).
★ Much rarer non-infectious causes may include
familial Mediterranean fever,
porphyria, and
systemic lupus erythematosus.
Treatment
Depending on the severity of the patient's state, the management of peritonitis may include:
★ 'General supportive measures' such as vigorous
intravenous rehydration and correction of
electrolyte disturbances.
★ '
Antibiotics' are usually administered
intravenously, but they may also be infused directly into the peritoneum. The empiric choice of
broad-spectrum antibiotics often consist of multiple drugs, and should be targeted against the most likely agents, depending on the cause of peritonitis (see above); once one or more agents are actually isolated, therapy will of course be targeted on them.
★ '
Surgery' (
laparotomy) is needed to perform a full exploration and lavage of the
peritoneum, as well as to correct any gross anatomical damage which may have caused peritonitis. The exception is
spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, which does not benefit from
surgery.
Prognosis
If properly treated, typical cases of surgically correctable peritonitis (e.g. perforated
peptic ulcer,
appendicitis, and
diverticulitis) have a
mortality rate of about <10% in otherwise
healthy patients, which rises to about 40% in the
elderly, and/or in those with significant underlying
illness, as well as in cases that present late (after 48h). If untreated, generalised peritonitis is almost always fatal.
Pathology
The
peritoneum normally appears greyish and glistening; it becomes dull 2-4 hours after the onset of peritonitis, initially with scarce
serous or slightly
turbid fluid. Later on, the
exudate becomes creamy and evidently
suppurative; in dehydrated patients, it also becomes very inspissated. The quantity of accumulated
exudate varies widely. It may be spread to the whole
peritoneum, or be walled off by the
omentum and
viscera.
Inflammation features infiltration by
neutrophils with fibrino-purulent exudation.
References
★
Peritonitis disease causes, treatment ...
★
All Refer Health article on peritonitis
★ Genuit T and Napolitano L. 2004.
Peritonitis and Abdominal Sepsis. Emedicine.com
★ Health square. 2004.
Peritonitis.