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Query: UMLS:C0031154 (peritonitis)
15,372 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The primary use of laparoscopy is as a surgical tool, with sterilizations being the overwhelming indication. The laparoscope is used less frequently as a non-surgical tool, with the major indication being for diagnosing infertility and/or amenorrhea, and for evaluation of obscure pelvic pain. There would seem to be several indications for laparoscopy that have been neglected, these being in confirming the diagnosis of acute pelvic inflammatory disease; in the evaluation of malignancies and abdominal-pelvic trauma; and the surgical treatment of pelvic pain. Lapar-The majority of these contraindications are relative, and depend soley on the laparoscopist's ability and his clinical judgment. The problems of hernias seem to have been over-emphasized. The laparoscopist should be aware of potential problems with umbilical hernia, and he probably can ignore hiatal hernias except when they are large and quite symptomatic. However, generalized abdominal peritonitis, significant hemoperitoneum with intestinal obstruction are felt by most authors to be absolute contraindications. The most frequent complications of laparoscopy involve the physoperitoneum. Except for cardiac arrest the most serious complications involve electrical burns to small bowel.
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PMID:Indications, contraindications and complications of laparoscopy. 12 9

Sclerosing peritonitis developed in a 43-year-old man with angina pectoris who had been receiving the beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist, propranolol. The patient had abdominal and back pain, weight loss, a midabdominal fullness, ascites, and evidence of partial small bowel obstruction. At surgery, the small bowel was distended and encased by dense fibrous tissue. Infectious and neoplastic causes of fibrosing peritoneal inflammation were excluded. The patient described in this report illustrates several features commonly experienced by individuals who developed sclerosing peritonitis associated with beta-adrenergic receptor blockade therapy. To my knowledge, the development of ascites and considerable ascitic fluid leukocytosis have not been described previously with this disorder.
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PMID:Sclerosing peritonitis and propranolol. 15 Aug 26

The records and case reports of 20 patients presenting with practolol induced sclerosing peritonitis have been reviewed revealing striking similarities: symptoms and signs of bowel obstruction or the presence of a vague abdominal mass in a patient who is currently taking or has previously taken practolol should alert one to the possibility of sclerosing peritonitis as the cause. Skin or eye reactions attributed to practolol provide further strong support for the diagnosis. Although practolol has now been discontinued in New Zealand its effects may become manifest months or years later.
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PMID:Drug-induced sclerosing peritonitis. 26 29

The authors analyse a series of 138 cases of complicated diverticular sigmoiditis treated surgically. They noted 50% of pyostercoral peritonitis, 32% of persigmoid abscesses, 13% of case of intestinal obstruction, and 5% of cases of fistual or hemorrhage. The overall mortality was 28% and depended mainly more on the surgical management adopted than on the type of complication. In this respect, simple colostomy with drainage of the septic focus had a mortality of 18%. The results suggest surgical operation in two stages, in the form of colonic resection, with, depending on each case, an anastomosis straight away with transverse colostomy or segmental colectomy with bitubular colostomy (Mikulicz procedure) or, in rarer cases, simple colostomy. The authors emphasise the interest of early surgery in sigmoiditis with complications and contrast the mortality of cold surgery which is now about 5% compared with 28% in emergency cases with complications.
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PMID:[Surgery of complicated diverticular sigmoiditis. Report of 138 cases (author's transl)]. 30 91

Three cases of bowel obstruction due to internal hernia caused by entrapment of bowel or omentum through a defect in the peritoneum covering the transplanted kidney are described. All three patients survived due to early surgical intervention and reduction of the hernia and/or resection of necrotic bowel or omentum. In view of the high mortality of peritonitis in transplant patients, early surgical treatment is indicated in all cases of intestinal obstruction to avoid the sequelae of bowel infarction. This "paratransplant" hernia represents the newest type of internal hernia described.
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PMID:"Paratransplant" hernia. Three patients with a new variant of internal hernia. 36 Aug 62

In a kindred with a familial visceral myopathy, seven patients had operations seeking relief of chronic abdominal pain and other symptoms of intestinal obstruction; one patient had an 80% cystectomy and a Y-V-plasty of the bladder neck for urinary retention. Five patients with megaduodenum had bypass operations; a side-to-side duodenojejunostomy was done in four and a retrocolic gastrojejunostomy in one. Two of these died of postoperative complications, and one developed symptomatic adhesions. Two other patients who had duodenojejunostomy have done well for 6 years and 1 1/2 years respectively. One patient with dilation of the distal jejunum and proximal ileum had relief of intestinal obstructive symptoms from jejunostomy to decompress the destal jejunum. One patient who had a resection of the descending and sigmoid colon for sigmoid volvulus has done well for four years. Three of these seven patients developed peritonitis postoperatively, and two had symptomatic adhesions after operations. Duodenal aspiration from a patient who developed postoperative peritonitis grew E. coli, 10(13) colonies per ml. After review of the results of operations in other families and in our kindred, we favor side-to-side duodenojejunostomy in megaduodenum. Duodenal aspirate must be cultured before operation. Evidence of bacterial overgrowth in the aspirate should prompt appropriate antibiotic treatment to reduce the likelihood of sepsis.
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PMID:Surgical treatment in familial visceral myopathy. 42 61

Infectious complications such a peritonitis, septicaemia and pneumonia are the most important factors causing postoperative death in surgery of intestinal obstruction in children. In a series of 237 patients with intestinal obstruction with 21 fatalities, the percentage of deaths due to infection was 85.7%. In 1967 to 1976, 259.301 children died in Germany, among them 1541 suffering from intestinal obstruction (0.6%); that means 3.1% of the 49.540 patients who died of intestinal obstruction were children. The mortality of intestinal obstruction in infancy and childhood had fallen to one third of the original during this period, but the mortality in newborn infants fell only by 50%. This correlates with the decreasing birth rate, so that the lower death rate due to intestinal obstruction seems to be explained by a lower number of neonates. The literature shows that relative mortality (20%) from intestinal obstruction in the newborn has, however, remained constant during the last 20 years.
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PMID:Intestinal obstruction in neonates: causes of death. 52 47

Within a period of 15 years 649 neonates were subjected to laparotomy; 60 (9%) of these patients died. Eighty-seven of the patients had a peritonitis already preoperatively without intestinal obstruction. Many of these were cases of ruptured omphaloceles or gastroschisis. In 17 infants a spontaneous intestinal perforation was the cause of the peritonitis. In 13 there was a preexisting meconium peritonitis. Seven children suffered from gangrenous intestine. Further causes for preoperative peritonitis were a complicated enteritis in 7 and a perforated appendix in 2 cases. Twenty-five or 29% of the children died. The highest mortality was found in children with ruptured omphalocele. It was 50% followed by gastroschisis with 36%. The mortality in patients with spontaneous intestinal perforation was rather similar, and the same high fatality rate was observed in infants with gangrenous intestine. In 28% of the children no cause for the peritonitis could be discovered. The high mortality rate is primarily due to the infants' bad general condition, i.e., low birth weight, prematurity and additional severe malformations.
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PMID:Mortality of preoperative peritonitis in newborn infants without intestinal obstruction. 52 59

The place of longitudinal myotomy in the treatment of diverticular disease of the sigmoid colon is discussed, with passing reference to the drawbacks of transverse myotomy. The prime indication for longitudinal myotomy is in the longstanding uncomplicated case of troublesome diverticular disease that has not responded to correct medical treatment, which should include high-residue diet and bran. Such cases are usually over 50 years of age, when a functional and reversible obstruction has become organic and irreversible. They comprise 75% of a series of 104 cases described. A secondary indication is in cases of diverticular disease which have been complicated by perforation, abscess formation, acute intestinal obstruction or fistulae. Such cases comprise 25% of the present series. They may settle after drainage and/or defunctioning colostomy. Myotomy can be carried out later, with or without limited resection, provided that all signs of pus or peritonitis have disappeared. The technique of the operation is described and the results are analysed.
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PMID:The place of sigmoid myotomy in diverticular disease. 52 73

During the 14 yr from 1965 through 1978, 49 infants presented shortly after birth with intestinal obstruction due to impacted meconium. Three of these patients did not have fibrocystic disease. Eight patients were cured by a Gastrografin enema. There were 18 patients who had complications that included associated atresia, volvulus, and/or peritonitis. Various operations were done including resection with either primary anastomosis or enterostomy or varieties of the foregoing. Twenty-three babies had the simple uncomplicated form of meconium ileus. Eleven of these underwent resection and six patients died. Twelve patients were treated by laparotomy, ileotomy through a purse-string suture and prolonged irrigations using acetylcysteine. Of this group only one succumbed. This latter course of management is recommended for patients with simple uncomplicated meconium ileus as it involves no resection, no enterostomy, nor any primary anastomosis.
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PMID:Meconium ileus: laparotomy without resection, anastomosis, or enterostomy. 55 Nov 49


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