Friday, 17 June 2016

Ascites- Peritoneal Infection-Internal Abdominal Hernia-Peritoneal Dialysis

Ascites
Ascites an excessive accumulation of peritoneal fluid within the peritoneal cavity. it can occur as a result to hepatic cirrhosis (portal venous congestion), malignant disease (e.g., cancer of the testis), or congestive heart failure. In a thin patient, as much as 1500 mL has to accumulate before ascites can be recognized clinically. In obese individuals, a far greater amount has to collect before it can be detected.

Peritoneal Infection
Infection may gain entrance to the peritoneal cavity through several routes: from the interior of the gastrointestinal tract and gallbladder, through the anterior abdominal wall, via the uterine tubes in females (gonococcal peritonitis in adults and pneumococcal peritonitis in children occur through this route), and from the blood. Collection of infected peritoneal fluid in one of the subphrenic spaces is often accompanied by infection of the pleural cavity. It is common to find a localized empyema in a patient with a subphrenic abscess. It is believed that the infection spreads from the peritoneum to the pleura via the diaphragmatic lymph vessels. A patient with a subphrenic abscess may complain of pain over the shoulder. (This also holds true for collections of blood under the diaphragm, which irritate the parietal diaphragmatic peritoneum.) The skin of the shoulder is supplied by the supraclavicular nerves (C3 and 4), which have the same segmental origin as the phrenic nerve, which supplies the peritoneum in the center of the undersurface of the diaphragm. To avoid the accumulation of infected fluid in the subphrenic spaces and to delay the absorption of toxins from intraperitoneal infections, it is common nursing practice to sit a patient up in bed with the back at an angle of 45°. In this position, the infected peritoneal fluid tends to gravitate downward into the pelvic cavity, where the rate of toxin absorption is slow .



Internal Abdominal Hernia
When  a loop of intestine enters a peritoneal pouch or recess like the lesser sac or the duodenal recesses and becomes strangulated at the edges of the recess. Remember that important structures form the boundaries of the entrance into the lesser sac and that the inferior mesenteric vein often lies in the anterior wall of the paraduodenal recess.

Peritoneal Dialysis
Because the peritoneum is a semipermeable membrane, it allows rapid bidirectional transfer of substances across itself. Because the surface area of the peritoneum is enormous, this transfer property has been made use of in patients with acute renal insufficiency. The efficiency of this method is only a fraction of that achieved by hemodialysis.
A watery solution, the dialysate, is introduced through a catheter through a small midline incision through the anterior abdominal wall below the umbilicus. The technique is the same as peritoneal lavage. The products of metabolism, such as urea, diffuse through the peritoneal lining cells from the blood vessels into the dialysate and are removed from the patient.






































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