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Query: UMLS:C0341503 (
bacterial peritonitis
)
1,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with liver cirrhosis and ascites suffer from spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(SBP) in up to 25%. The typical clinical signs are abdominal pain with tenderness and fever. 30% have no signs of peritonitis. Then clinical worsening, encephalopathy, rising serum creatinine levels, and therapy resistant ascites may be the only clinical features. SBP must be differentiated from bacterascites and culture negative neutrocytic ascites by the polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) count in the ascites and the presence of positive culture results, which has prognostic implications. Gram negative rods from the colon play an important etiological role in SBP. Gastrointestinal bleeding, lack of serum complement, a low ascites protein and the extent of intrahepatic shunts predispose to SBP. Then, prophylaxis with the comparable drugs neomycin and norfloxacin is indicated. Coexisting encephalopathy has to be treated by the therefore effective neomycin. Otherwise, norfloxacin is the drug of choice because of better acceptance and lower costs. Chemical parameters of the ascites (pH value less than 7.4;
LDH
and lactate greater than serum levels; glucose less than 50 mg%) help to assess the severity of peritonitis. The course of ascitic PMN under therapy and the time of persisting positive cultures can discriminate SBP from secondary peritonitis. Antibiotics of choice are amoxicillin-clavulanic acid and cefotaxime. Short course therapy (5 days) is a effective as long course therapy (10 days). Today SBP is no more life-threatening because diagnosis, prophylaxis and therapy have improved. However, complication rate of patients with liver cirrhosis and ascites has not changed.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis]. 141 38
Chemical analysis of ascitic fluid may be helpful in determining the underlying disease. We discuss the diagnostic accuracy of the common and newer chemical parameters (protein,
LDH
, lactate, glucose, cholesterol, triglycerides, phospholipids, fibronectin, albumin gradient [value of serum minus value of ascites], ferritin, tumor markers, immunomodulators, leukocytes, bacterial and cytologic examinations). We also review the pathogenesis and clinical findings of the most frequent ascites forms (benign hepatic, infective, malignant ascites, ascites associated with liver metastases or hepatocellular carcinoma, cardiac and pancreatic ascites) and the most important diagnosis criteria. In the malignant ascites a high cholesterol, a narrow albumin gradient or a high ferritin value have high diagnostic accuracy, but diagnosis is by the finding of malignant cells. For the diagnosis of infective ascites, bacteriology is mandatory even though the results are negative in most cases, particularly in spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
where diagnosis has to be established clinically, by a low pH or by a high leukocyte count. Benign hepatic ascites is diagnosed by demonstrating an underlying chronic liver disease and laboratory examinations of the peritoneal fluid to exclude other causes. The laboratory tests in ascites associated with liver metastases or with hepatocellular carcinoma were similar to those in benign hepatic ascites and the two ascites forms must be separated by other clinical and technical findings. Pancreatic ascites can easily be distinguished from the other forms by the high amylase and lipase content.
...
PMID:[Laboratory chemical analysis in ascites]. 203 10
In a prospective study on 151 patients with cirrhosis of the liver we found 9 episodes of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(SBP) in 8 patients (5.3% of the whole population or 18% of the ascitic patients). There was a clear difference in WBC-count, polymorphonuclear cell count,
LDH
and lactate in the ascitic fluid between SBP and controls. Clinical symptoms were discrete. 6 of 8 patients had an advanced form of cirrhosis belonging to Child-grade C. Half of patients died. The clinical situation of the 4 survivors improved after antibiotic treatment. Ascitic analysis of WBC and PMC-count in combination with
LDH
and lactate may reveal SBP as the reason of fever or clinical impairment in cirrhotics.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: studies of the incidence and clinical and laboratory chemical parameters]. 223 63
In a search for clinical and laboratory factors that would aid in early diagnosis of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
, we identified two groups of patients with chronic liver disease and ascites: 1) 38 patients with 40 episodes of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
, and 2) 39 randomly selected patients with 40 sterile paracenteses who were matched for severity of liver dysfunction as a reference group. A variety of clinical and laboratory features were examined. The absolute lymphocyte count in peripheral blood was lower for the spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
group (mean = 703/mm3 vs. 1,212/mm3, p less than 0.005). Four ascitic fluid variables, i.e., a white blood cell count of greater than or equal to 300/mm3, a polymorphonuclear leukocyte count of greater than or equal to 240/mm3, an ascitic fluid/serum
LDH
ratio of greater than or equal to 0.4, or an ascitic fluid/serum glucose ratio of less than or equal to 1.0, could separate the spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and reference groups with both sensitivity and specificity of greater than 70%. Although ascitic fluid total leucocyte and polymorphonuclear leucocyte counts are appropriate indicators for the early diagnosis of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
, the possibility of their false positivity should be warranted. The use of multiple tests including ascitic fluid/serum
LDH
and glucose ratios has better positive predictive value than a single test alone.
...
PMID:Early diagnosis of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: values of ascitic fluid variables. 366 66
The value of chemical (protein,
LDH
, glucose, total and differential cell count) and cytological examination of the ascitic fluid in the differential diagnosis of peritoneal ascites was assessed in a prospective study of 98 patients. The ascites caused by hepatic metastases and primary carcinoma were of the transudative type and could not be distinguished from the type caused by cirrhosis on the basis of the parameters examined. In contrast the ascites caused by peritoneal carcinosis was exudative presenting a highly significant (p less than 0.001 for all parameters) difference from the three preceding groups. However there was no clear-cut distinction between the groups: in fact cirrhosis patients may present exudative ascites (8% in the present series, 12-19% in the literature). There was a substantial decrease in ascitic fluid glucose (less than 60 mg/dl) only in peritonitis and its measurement is therefore of secondary importance. In contrast with reports by other authors the ratio between
LDH
and protein concentrations in the effusion and the serum was found to be insignificant. The cytological examination revealed a significantly higher total cell count in
bacterial peritonitis
with a prevalence of polymorphonuclear cells and in peritoneal carcinoma where mononuclear cells predominate. Finally cytology revealed malignant tumour cells in the ascitic fluid and neoplastic peritoneal effusions in 28% of the patients examined.
...
PMID:[Chemical and cytologic tests in the differential diagnosis of ascites]. 382 20
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is an infection that is not caused by intra-abdominal source requiring surgery. Nowadays SBP is the main cause of death in patients with cirrhosis. Treatment is carried out with third generation cephalosporins and albumin infusions. The aim of the study is to identify patients with SBP and to be distinguished from the cases with secondary
bacterial peritonitis
(SecBP) in patients with cirrhosis and ascites. We studied 167 patients with cirrhosis and ascites and SBP was observed in 25 of them, while SecBP--in 22. The diagnosis of SBP is set in neutrophilic leukocytes in ascites > or = 250 cells/mm3 as bacterial cultures are positive in only 16% of them. Completely asymptomatic course had 16% of patients with SBP. Diagnosis of SecBP (according to Runyon's criteria) is based on increased total protein in ascitic fluid > 10 g/l (in 63.7% of patients > 30 g/l), elevated lactate dehydrogenase in ascites (
LDH
is > 240 U/l in all patients) and glucose < 2,7 mmol/l (only 4.5% of cases with secondary
bacterial peritonitis
). In support of SecBP are the polymicrobial flora, the isolation of anaerobes, enterococci, fungi, and the very high number of neutrophilic leukocytes in the peritoneal effusion and the refractoriness from conservative treatment. The examination of ascites with Multistix is more informative in secondary than in spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
. In suspected secondary
bacterial peritonitis
CT is indicated.
...
PMID:Diagnosis of spontaneous and secondary bacterial peritonitis in patients with hepatic cirrhosis and ascites. 2445 63
Biochemical testing of peritoneal and pleural fluids is carried out widely, although the range of tests likely to be useful is limited in comparison to the repertoire of tests available in a modern biochemistry laboratory. Fluids accumulate when pathological processes cause an imbalance between hydrostatic pressure gradients, capillary membrane permeability and lymphatic capacity, resulting in protein-poor transudates or inflammatory exudates. In peritoneal fluid, albumin is the most useful test, for the calculation of the serum-ascites albumin gradient; protein and
LDH
have a role regarding risk and diagnosis of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and amylase may be useful in diagnosing fluid accumulation due to pancreatitis. Peritoneal fluid pH and glucose are not indicated analyses. For pleural fluid, protein and
LDH
are important in distinguishing between transudate and exudate using Light's criteria; albumin and the serum-effusion albumin gradient may have a complementary role in patients already on diuretics. Pleural fluid pH is the most useful marker of infection although
LDH
and glucose are also used. Pleural fluid amylase is often measured but, if raised, is more likely to reflect a malignant process than pancreatic disease as the former is much more prevalent. Tumour markers in both peritoneal and pleural fluids generally have limited diagnostic accuracy for detecting local malignancy. Limited studies validating standard serum test methods for use with pleural and peritoneal fluids have been published but work is progressing in this area both in Australasia and overseas and opportunities exist for contributing to this effort.
...
PMID:Biochemical Analysis of Pleural Fluid and Ascites. 3047 91