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Pneumoperitoneum
Abnormal presence of gases in the peritoneal cavity of the abdomen
Abnormal presence of gases in the peritoneal cavity of the abdomen
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Pneumoperitoneum |
| image | Pneumoperitoneum modification.jpg |
| caption | Frontal chest X-ray. The air bubble below the right hemidiaphragm (on the left of the image) is a pneumoperitoneum. |
| Pneumoperitoneum is pneumatosis (abnormal presence of air or other gas) in the peritoneal cavity, a potential space within the abdominal cavity. The most common cause is a perforated abdominal organ, generally from a perforated peptic ulcer, although any part of the bowel may perforate from a benign ulcer, tumor or abdominal trauma. A perforated appendix rarely causes a pneumoperitoneum.
Spontaneous pneumoperitoneum is a rare case that is not caused by an abdominal organ rupture. This is also called an idiopathic spontaneous pneumoperitoneum when the cause is not known.
In the mid-twentieth century, an "artificial" pneumoperitoneum was sometimes intentionally administered as a treatment for a hiatal hernia. This was achieved by insufflating the abdomen with carbon dioxide. The practice is currently used by surgical teams in order to aid in performing laparoscopic surgery.
Causes
- Perforated duodenal ulcer – The most common cause of rupture in the abdomen. Especially of the anterior aspect of the first part of the duodenum.
- Perforated peptic ulcer{{cite web |url= https://www.lecturio.com/concepts/peptic-ulcer-disease/| title= Peptic Ulcer Disease
- Bowel obstruction
- Ruptured diverticulum
- Penetrating trauma
- Ruptured inflammatory bowel disease (e.g., megacolon)
- Necrotising enterocolitis/pneumatosis coli
- Bowel cancer
- Ischemic bowel
- Steroids
- After laparotomy
- After laparoscopy
- Breakdown of a surgical anastomosis
- Bowel injury after endoscopy
- Peritoneal dialysis (PD), although the prevalence of pneumoperitoneum is estimated to be less than 4% among people with PD in a more recent study in the United Kingdom.
- Vaginal insufflation (air enters via the fallopian tubes; e.g., water-skiing, oral sex)
- Colonic or peritoneal infection
- From chest (e.g., bronchopleural fistula)
- Non-invasive PAP (positive airway pressure) can force air down duodenum as well as down trachea.
Spontaneous pneumoperitoneum
A spontaneous pneumoperitoneum is a rare case that is not caused by an abdominal organ rupture. This is also called an idiopathic spontaneous pneumoperitoneum when the cause is not known. Causes of a spontaneous pneumoperitoneum, with no peritonitis include a barotrauma due to mechanical ventilation, and a tracheal rupture following an emergency intubation. In the ventilation case, air had passed from the chest into the abdominal cavity through the diaphragm. In the tracheal rupture, air had passed along the great vessels.
Diagnosis
signs When present, pneumoperitoneum can be seen on projectional radiography, but small amounts are often missed, and CT scan is nowadays regarded as a criterion standard in the assessment of a pneumoperitoneum. CT can visualize quantities as small as 5 cm3 of air or gas.
Signs that can be seen on projectional radiography are shown below:
The double wall sign marks the presence of air on both sides of the intestine. However, a false double wall sign can result from two loops of bowel being in contact with one another. The sign is named after Leo George Rigler. It is not the same as Rigler's triad.
The football sign is when the abdomen appears as a large oval radiolucency reminiscent of an American football on a supine projectional radiograph. The football sign is most frequently seen in infants with spontaneous or iatrogenic gastric perforation causing pneumoperitoneum. It is also seen in bowel obstruction with secondary perforation, as in Hirschprung disease, midgut volvulus, meconium ileus and intestinal atresia. Iatrogenic causes like endoscopic perforation may also give football sign.
The Cupola sign is seen when air is accumulated under the central tendon of the diaphragm.
Image:Pneumoperitoneum chest X-ray.jpg|Another pneumoperitoneum on chest X-ray. Image:Pneumoperitoneum lateral decubitus.jpg|Pneumoperitoneum seen on X-ray with the patient lying on his left side. File:Double wall sign annotated.jpg|Double wall sign. This is a secondary sign of pneumoperitoneum. Patient is supine, and air within the abdomen and lumen of the bowel accentuate both sides of the bowel wall. File:UOTW 68 - Ultrasound of the Week 2.webm|Ultrasound finding of pneumoperitoneum known as "peritoneal stripe sign"
Differential diagnosis
As differential diagnoses, a subphrenic abscess, bowel interposed between diaphragm and liver (Chilaiditi syndrome), and linear atelectasis at the base of the lungs can simulate free air under the diaphragm on a chest X-ray.
Treatment
Treatment depends on the cause of the condition.
Terminology
Pneumoperitoneum can be described as peritoneal emphysema, just as pneumomediastinum can be called mediastinal emphysema, but pneumoperitoneum is the typical name.
References
References
- "Large Bowel Obstruction".
- "Small Bowel Obstruction".
- "diverticulum {{!}} Definition of diverticulum in English by Lexico Dictionaries".
- (2005). "Head, Face, and Neck Trauma: Comprehensive Management". Thieme.
- "Megacolon".
- [http://www.columbia.edu/itc/hs/medical/humandev/2004/Neonate2.pdf Necrotizing Enterocolitis] Bugs, Drugs and Things That Go Bump in the Night
- (2014-05-12). "Colon Cancer Treatment (PDQ®)".
- (April 2004). "Systematic review: the epidemiology of ischaemic colitis". Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics.
- (May 2000). "AGA technical review on intestinal ischemia. American Gastrointestinal Association". Gastroenterology.
- American Gastroenterological Association. (May 2000). "American Gastroenterological Association Medical Position Statement: guidelines on intestinal ischemia". Gastroenterology.
- (April 2011). "Pneumoperitoneum in peritoneal dialysis patients; one centre's experience". NDT Plus.
- (May 1980). "Medical hazards of the water skiing douche". Annals of Emergency Medicine.
- (Oct 2000). "Sexual activity as cause for non-surgical pneumoperitoneum". JSLS.
- (25 Sep 2013). "Non-surgical pneumoperitoneum after oro-genital intercourse". International Journal of Surgery Case Reports.
- (September 1993). "[Idiopathic spontaneous pneumoperitoneum. Case discussion based on two cases, assessment procedure and therapy and review of the literature]". Helvetica Chirurgica Acta.
- (July 1992). "Spontaneous pneumoperitoneum without peritonitis". International Surgery.
- (2017-12-06). "Pneumoperitoneum Imaging". WebMD LLC.
- (March 1999). "Small bowel obstruction in a young adult". Postgraduate Medical Journal.
- (July 1977). "Pneumoperitoneum: the misleading double wall sign". Clinical Radiology.
- (2009). "El signo de Leo Rigler: doble pared en neumoperitoneo.". Revista chilena de radiología.
- (April 2004). "The football sign". Radiology.
- (2015). "Pneumoperitoneum: What to look for in a radiograph?". Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care.
- (22 March 2016). "UOTW #68 - Ultrasound of the Week".
- (March 2015). "Spontaneous pneumoperitoneum in a patient after ventilation therapy". Polski Przeglad Chirurgiczny.
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