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 etiology 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]
Varient 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 |
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Monomicrobial bacterascites |
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Other varieties of ascitic fluid infections | Ascitic fluid analysis and other information |
Polymicrobial bacterascites |
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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) | Diagnosis of peritonitis within 48hours of hospital admission in patients with any prior health care contact in the past 90 days (e.g. recent hospitalisation, nursing home, dialysis centres and other health care setting). |
Nosocomial SBP | Diagnosis of peritonitis 48hours after the hospital admission. |
Community acquired SBP (CA) | Diagnosis of peritonitis within 48hours of hospital admission, but no history of prior health care contact in the past 90 days. |
Multi-drug resistant SBP | Associate with prior history of antibiotic exposure and treat peritonitis based on culture sensitivities. |
Recurrent SBP | Recurrent episodes of peritonitis increases risk of mortality compared to first episode mortality of SBP. Prophylactic antibiotics can reduce the mortality. |
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