Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis differential diagnosis

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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

SBP must be differentiated from other abdominal conditions presenting with fever and abdominal pain. It also has to be differentiated from secondary peritonitis, chemical peritonitis, peritoneal dialysis peritonitis, chronic tuberculous peritonitis.

Differentiating Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis from other Diseases

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis presents with fever and abdominal pain. Diseases presenting with similar features include:

Disease Prominent clinical findings Lab tests Tratment
Primary peritonitis Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
Tuberculous peritonitis
Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis (CAPD peritonitis)
Secondary peritonitis Acute bacterial secondary peritonitis
Biliary peritonitis
Tertiary peritonitis
Familial Mediterranean fever (periodic peritonitis, familial paroxysmal polyserositis)
  • Colchicine prevents but does not treat acute attacks.
Granulomatous peritonitis
  • Diagnosed by the demonstration of diagnostic Maltese cross pattern of starch particles.
Sclerosing encapsulating peritonitis
Intraperitoneal abscesses
  • Most common etiologies being Gastrointestinal perforations, postoperative complications, and penetrating injuries.
  • Signs and symptoms depend on the location of the abscess within the peritoneal cavity and the extent of involvement of the surrounding structures.
  • Diagnosis is suspected in any patient with a predisposing condition. In a third of cases it occurs as a sequela of generalized peritonitis.
  • The pathogenic organisms are similar to those responsible for peritonitis, but anaerobic organisms occupy an important role.
  • The mortality rate of serious intra-abdominal abscesses is about 30%.
  • Diagnosed best by CT scan of the abdomen.
  • Treatment consists of prompt and complete CT or US guided drainage of the abscess, control of the primary cause, and adjunctive use of effective antibiotics. Open drainage is reserved for abscesses for which percutaneous drainage is inappropriate or unsuccessful.
Peritoneal mesothelioma
  • Arises from the mesothelium lining the peritoneal cavity.
  • Its incidence is approximately 300-500 new cases being diagnosed in the United States each year. As with pleural mesothelioma, there is an association with an asbestos exposure.
  • Most commonly affects men at the age of 50-69 years. Patients most often present with abdominal pain and later increased abdominal girth and ascites along with anorexia, weight loss and abdominal pain.
  • Mean time from diagnosis to death is less than 1 year without treatment.
  • CT with intravenous contrast typically demonstrates the thickening of the peritoneum. Laparoscopy with tissue biopsy or CT guided tissue biopsy with immunohistochemical staining for calretinin, cytokeratin 5/6, mesothelin, and Wilms tumor 1 antigen remain the gold standard for diagnosis.
peritoneal carcinomatosis

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