Acute Peritonitis 
    * Introduction 
    * Symptoms and Diagnosis 
    * Treatment 
Peritonitis is an inflammatory reaction of the peritoneum, which may be diffuse or localized infectious origin or not. Most  are of infectious peritonitis, the most frequent pathogens were  Escherichia coli, enterococci, Klebsiela, Enterobacter, Proteus,  Bacteroides. Peritoneal  cavity extends from the diaphragm (cranial) to the pelvis (caudal), and  the abdominal wall (anterior) to the retroperitoneal viscera (aorta,  vena cava, ureters, kidneys). Peritoneum is composed of two layers, one internal (visceral peritoneum) and one external (parietal peritoneum). Most  peritonitis (90%) are due to destruction of the gastrointestinal tract  (secondary peritonitis) in peritoneal fluid when identifying multiple  home enteral germs. A  much lower percentage of peritonitis in which it is preserved and the  integrity of the gastrointestinal tract occur in the absence of trauma  or surgery (primary peritonitis). For the diagnosis of peritonitis are very important history and physical examination. Thus,  if the patient has a history of recent hospitalization, chronic  illness, recent surgery, fever, chills, pain intensity is increased to  raise the suspicion of abdominal peritonitis. Nausea  and vomiting are also symptoms and palpation of the abdomen showed  significant protection against muscle (abdominal wall contractions that  occur during palparii) and muscle contraction (muscle contraction  reaching abdomen unprovoked) in acute peritonitis. When  acute peritonitis was diagnosed, treatment should be prompt to avoid an  unfavorable evolution to sepsis and then exitus (death). Treatment  of choice is surgical and consists in removing the source of  contamination, contamination reduction, waste treatment and infection  prevention of recurrence of infection. Postoperative evolution is favorable if prompt surgical treatment and antibiotic treatment is completed. 
Pathogenesis 
The  appearance of peritonitis usually involves the interaction of three  factors: flooding bacterial peritoneal cavity, increased virulence of  these pathogens and the means of defense weakening local or general. In  primary peritonitis is contamination by marrow during a bacteremia  (presence of bacteria in blood), which is usually a single seed and  infections occur mainly in children and immunocompromised. Secondary peritonitis are due to lesion of visceral abdominal or digestive tract. Characteristics of germs in secondary peritonitis generally correspond injured body flora. Normal  flora of the esophagus, stomach, duodenum and proximal part of the  small intestine is low, then begins to increase progressively in the  distal intestine, such as colon flora is very rich. 
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