Peritonitis classification
Peritonitis Main Page |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Shivani Chaparala M.B.B.S [2]
Overview
Peritonitis may be classified according to the etiology into 3 subtypes: primary, secondary, and tertiary peritonitis.
Classification
Classification Based on Etiology
Peritonitis is classified based on the cause of the inflammatory process and the character of microbial contamination as follows:[1][2][3]
Peritonitis | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Primary peritonitis | Secondary peritonitis | Tertiary peritonitis | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
❑ Spontaneous peritonitis ❑ Peritonitis in patients with CAPD ❑ Tuberculous peritonitis | ❑ Peritonitis without evidence for pathogens ❑ Peritonitis with fungi ❑ Peritonitis with low-grade pathogenic bacteria | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Acute perforation peritonitis ❑ Gastrointestinal perforation ❑ Intestinal ischemia ❑ Pelviperitonitis and other forms | Postoperative peritonitis ❑ Anastomotic leak ❑ Accidental perforation and devascularization | Post-traumatic peritonitis ❑ After blunt abdominal trauma ❑ After penetrating abdominal trauma | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Classification Based on Ascitic Fluid Analysis
Peritonitis is classified as follows based ascitic fluid analysis:[4]
Variants of Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) | Ascitic fluid analysis and other information |
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SBP culture postive |
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Culture-negative neutrocytic ascites(CNNA) or culture-negative SBP[5] |
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Monomicrobial bacterascites[6] |
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Other varieties of ascitic fluid infections | Ascitic fluid analysis and other information |
Polymicrobial bacterascites[7] |
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Secondary peritonitis |
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Classification Based on Clinical Setting
Peritonitis is classified as follows based ascitic fluid analysis:[4]
Clinical varient of Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis | Explanation |
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Health care-associated SBP (HCA) |
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Nosocomial SBP |
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Community acquired SBP (CA) |
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Multi-drug resistant SBP |
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Recurrent SBP |
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Classification Based on the clinical view point
Peritonitis may be classified based on the prognosis into the following types:[8]
- Uncomplicated: In uncomplicated peritonitis, the infection only involves a single organ and no anatomical disruption is present. Usually, patients with such infections can be managed with surgical resection alone and no antimicrobial therapy besides peri-operative prophylaxis is necessary.
- Complicated:The infectious process proceeds beyond the organ that is the source of the infection, and causes either localised peritonitis, also referred to as abdominal abscess, or diffuse peritonitis, depending on the ability of the host to contain the process within a part of the abdominal cavity.They are the important cause of morbidity and more frequently associated with poor prognosis.However, an early clinical diagnosis, followed by adequate source control to stop ongoing contamination and restore anatomical structures and physiological function, as well as prompt initiation of appropriate empirical therapy, can limit the associated mortality.
Classification based on the etiological agents
- Peritonitis, caused by enteric organisms such as E.coli, Klebsiella, staphylococci, streptococci, anaerobes.
- Peritonitis, caused by bacteria residing out of GI tract such as gonococci, pneumococci.
- Aseptic peritonitis resulting from irritation of the peritoneal cavity from the extravasation of fluids such as blood, gastric juice.
Classification according to the extension of inflammatory process
- Local:
- Diffuse:
- Generalized:
Classification based on the pathological alterations in the clinical course of peritonitis
- Reactive: In the first 24 hours when there are maximal manifestations of local signs of peritonitis.
- Toxic: In 24-72 hours, when there is increased general intoxication with a gradual reduction in the local signs of peritonitis.
- Terminal: It is often the severe stage of peritonitis, usually after 72 hours characterized by irreversible intoxication in the background of a sharply expressed local manifestations of peritonitis.
References
- ↑ Wittmann DH, Schein M, Condon RE (1996). "Management of secondary peritonitis". Ann Surg. 224 (1): 10–8. PMC 1235241. PMID 8678610.
- ↑ Nathens AB, Rotstein OD, Marshall JC (1998) Tertiary peritonitis: clinical features of a complex nosocomial infection. World J Surg 22 (2):158-63. PMID: 9451931
- ↑ Mishra SP, Tiwary SK, Mishra M, Gupta SK (2014) An introduction of Tertiary Peritonitis. J Emerg Trauma Shock 7 (2):121-3. DOI:10.4103/0974-2700.130883 PMID: 24812458
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Dever JB, Sheikh MY (2015) Review article: spontaneous bacterial peritonitis--bacteriology, diagnosis, treatment, risk factors and prevention. Aliment Pharmacol Ther 41 (11):1116-31. DOI:10.1111/apt.13172 PMID: 25819304
- ↑ Runyon BA, Hoefs JC (1984). "Culture-negative neutrocytic ascites: a variant of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis". Hepatology. 4 (6): 1209–11. PMID 6500513.
- ↑ Runyon BA (1990). "Monomicrobial nonneutrocytic bacterascites: a variant of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis". Hepatology. 12 (4 Pt 1): 710–5. PMID 2210672.
- ↑ Runyon BA, Hoefs JC, Canawati HN (1986). "Polymicrobial bacterascites. A unique entity in the spectrum of infected ascitic fluid". Arch Intern Med. 146 (11): 2173–5. PMID 3778046.
- ↑ Blot S, De Waele JJ (2005). "Critical issues in the clinical management of complicated intra-abdominal infections". Drugs. 65 (12): 1611–20. PMID 16060697.