Vol. 8, Issue 3, Part A (2024)

An observational assessment of the clinico-etiological profile and management outcome of peritonitis secondary to hollow viscus perforation

Author(s):

Dr. Linganagouda S Patil, Dr. Nutan BV and Dr. Wricha Ganesh Chaunal

Abstract:
Aim: The aim of the present study was to assess the etiological profile, surgical management and its peri-operative complications of peritonitis secondary to hollow viscus perforation.
Methods: The present observational study was conducted in the department of general surgery for the period of 1 year. An analysis of 100 individuals with generalised peritonitis from hollow viscus perforation was conducted. Gender, diagnosis, operating technique, and first-month peri-operative problems were examined.
Results: 40% of patients were 20-40 years old, 80% men and 20% women. 72% had problems and 7% died. Peptic ulcer disease was the most prevalent cause at 35%, followed by idiopathic 29%, typhoid 13%, malignancy 12%, appendicular perforation 7%, and trauma 4%. Most perforations were gastric (35%), duodenal (20%), ileal (18%), large bowel 12%, appendicular 8%, and jejunal 7%. There were 9 (9%) appendicectomy instances. No problems occurred in 2 (22%) subjects. Wound infection was the most prevalent consequence in 21 patients (41%), followed by abdominal dehiscence (11%), paralytic ileus (11%), bronchopneumonia (18%), faecal fistula (10%), and abdominal abscess (7%).
Conclusion: Hollow viscus perforation is the most frequent surgical emergency, and its outcomes and consequences vary on age, general health, location, co-morbidities, and aetiologies, with tropical nations having different pathophysiology than western ones. Also observed is an increase in cancers.

Pages: 06-08  |  416 Views  193 Downloads



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How to cite this article:
Dr. Linganagouda S Patil, Dr. Nutan BV and Dr. Wricha Ganesh Chaunal. An observational assessment of the clinico-etiological profile and management outcome of peritonitis secondary to hollow viscus perforation. Int. J. Surg. Sci. 2024;8(3):06-08. DOI: https://doi.org/10.33545/surgery.2024.v8.i3a.1088