Spontaneous Pneumoperitoneum: Intraperitoneal Air without Hollow Viscus Injury
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Diagnosing blunt hollow viscus injury: is computed tomography the answer?
BACKGROUND Blunt hollow viscus injury (BHVI) is challenging to diagnose. The purpose of this study was to determine the reliability of physical exam and the role of computed tomography (CT) in the diagnosis of BHVI. METHODS All blunt abdominal trauma (BAT) admissions to a level 1 trauma center from January 2009 through December 2011 were identified through the trauma registry. Data collected ...
متن کاملHollow viscus injury in children: Starship Hospital experience
Starship Children's Hospital in Auckland, New Zealand, serves a population of 1.2 million people and is a tertiary institution for pediatric trauma. This study is designed to review all cases of abdominal injury (blunt and penetrating) that resulted in injury of a hollow abdominal viscus including the stomach, duodenum, small intestine, large intestine and urinary bladder. The mechanism of inju...
متن کاملSpontaneous pneumoperitoneum and other nonsurgical causes of intraperitoneal free gas.
Intraperitoneal free gas seen radiologically as air under the diaphragm nearly always indicates a perforated abdominal viscus that requires surgical intervention. Rarely, however, the presence of a pneumoperitoneum may not indicate an intra-abdominal perforation and thus may not require laparotomy. Such a situation is termed spontaneous or nonsurgical pneumoperitoneum. In this review, we explor...
متن کاملThe case of spontaneous pneumoperitoneum without peritonitis.
Spontaneous pneumoperitoneum without peritonitis is a rare phenomenon which poses a dilemma to the surgeons faced with this problem. Two such cases and their outcome are presented. The first case was caused by tracheal rupture during emergency intubation and was treated by observation until complete resolution. The second case was caused by barotrauma during positive pressure ventilation and wa...
متن کاملPneumoperitoneum associated with artificial ventilation.
Four adults injured in serious road-traffic accidents developed pneumoperitoneum after artificial ventilation. No case could be attributed to injury or to perforation of a hollow viscus in the belly, but doubt about this in one patient resulted in exploratory laparotomy. In three patients the origin of intraperitoneal air was considered to be leakage through minute ruptures in alveoli subjected...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Trauma Image and Procedure
سال: 2016
ISSN: 2508-5298
DOI: 10.24184/tip.2016.1.1.21