Secondary peritonitis causes
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Shivani Chaparala M.B.B.S [2]
Overview
Secondary peritonitis has numerous causes. It most often results from entry of enteric bacteria into the peritoneal cavity through a necrotic defect in th wall of the intestines or other viscus as a result of obstruction, infarction or after rupture of an intra-abdominal visceral abscess. It most often occurs after perforation of appendix. Nonbacterial causes of peritonitis include leakage of blood into the peritoneal cavity due to rupture of a tubal pregnancy, ovarian cyst, or aneurysmal vessel.
Causes
Life-Threatening Causes
- Solid organ rupture
- Perforated peptic ulcer
- Tubo-ovarian abscess
- Small bowel perforation
Common causes
Common causes of secondary peritonitis include:[1][2]
- Perforated PUD
- Appendicitis
- Diverticulitis
- Acute cholecystitis
- Pancreatitis
- Post-surgical complications
Causes by Source
Infected Secondary Peritonitis | Non-infected Secondary Peritonitis | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Perforation of a hollow viscus organ | Disruption of the peritoneum | Leakage of sterile body fluids into the peritoneum | Sterile abdominal surgery | Rarer non-infectious causes |
Perforation of a hollow viscus (most common cause of peritonitis)
Other possible causes for perforation
Most common organisms: mixed bacteria |
Most common organisms |
Sterile body fluids such as
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. |
Due to sterile foreign body inadvertently left in the abdomen after surgery (e.g. gauze, sponge) |
Causes by Organ System
Cause of Peforation | Most likely organism |
---|---|
Nonperforation secondary peritonitis | |
Acute appendicitis | |
Loculated perforation of | |
Post operative
gastric ulcer perforation |
|
Loculated perforation of
umbilical hernia |
|
Colonic ulcer | |
Loculated perforation of
colonic polypectomy |
|
Colonic ulcer | |
Infected
pancreaticpseudocyst |
|
Postoperative
in general |
|
Perforation secondary peritonitis | |
Perforated gastric ulcer | |
Perforated duodenal ulcer | |
Perforated bowel | |
Perforated gallbladder |
References
- ↑ Akriviadis EA, Runyon BA (1990). "Utility of an algorithm in differentiating spontaneous from secondary bacterial peritonitis". Gastroenterology. 98 (1): 127–33. PMID 2293571.
- ↑ Wong PF, Gilliam AD, Kumar S, Shenfine J, O'Dair GN, Leaper DJ (2005). "Antibiotic regimens for secondary peritonitis of gastrointestinal origin in adults". Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2): CD004539. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD004539.pub2. PMID 15846719.