| Literature DB >> 35453865 |
Agnieszka Brodzisz1, Maryla Kuczyńska2, Monika Zbroja3, Weronika Cyranka3, Czesław Cielecki4, Magdalena Maria Woźniak1.
Abstract
A six-year-old boy visits a general practitioner due to diarrhea and abdominal pain with a moderate fever of up to 39 °C for 2 days. Treatment is initiated; however, the recurrence of abdominal pain is observed. Physical examination of the child at the emergency department reveals abdominal guarding and visible, palpable, painful intestinal loops in the left iliac and hypogastric regions-this is referred to as an 'acute abdomen'. An X-ray shows single levels of air and fluid indicative of bowel obstruction. Ultrasound reveals distended, fluid-filled intestinal loops with diminished motility. The intestinal wall is swollen. Laboratory tests indicate increased inflammatory indices. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography examination of the abdominal cavity and lesser pelvis shows intestinal dilation. The loops were filled with liquid content and numerous collections of gas. The patient is qualified for a laparotomy. An intraoperative diagnosis of perforated gangrenous appendicitis with autoamputation was made. In addition, numerous interloop and pelvic abscesses, excessive adhesions, signs of small intestine micro-perforation, and diffuse peritonitis are found. The patient's condition and laboratory parameters significantly improve during the following days of hospitalization. Despite the implementation of multidirectional, specialized diagnostics in the case of acute abdomen, in everyday practice we still encounter situations where the final diagnosis is made intraoperatively only.Entities:
Keywords: acute abdomen; chronic appendicitis; diagnostic imaging; intestine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35453865 PMCID: PMC9028538 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12040818
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1(a) Single air-fluid levels on X-ray (red arrows); (b) US examination showing intestinal wall edema (red arrow) and distended, fluid-filled lumen of the intestine (blue arrow).
Laboratory indices of the patient.
| Laboratory Indices | Value | Norm |
|---|---|---|
| CRP | 18.34 mg/dL | <5 mg/dL |
| PCT | 42.370 ng/mL | <0.05 ng/mL |
| ESR | 53 mm/h | 1–10 mm/h |
| Ferritin | 1041 ng/mL | 30–400 ng/mL |
| Leukocytosis | 27,570/μL | 4000–10,000/μL |
| Neutrophilia | 22,730/μL | 1800–8000/μL |
| Reduction of ATIII | 59% | 80–120% |
| D-dimers | 6946 ng/mL | <500 ng/mL |
| NT-proBNP activity | 1476 pg/mL | <125 pg/mL |
Legend: CRP—C reactive protein. PCT—procalcitonin. ESR—erythrocyte sedimentation rate. ATIII—Antithrombin III. NT-proBNP—N-terminal pro hormone B-type natriuretic peptide.
Figure 2CT examination with contrast. Red arrow indicates mesenteric and omental fat stranding consistent with inflammatory infiltration and blue arrow—distended, fluid-filled lumen of the intestine.
Figure 3Fluid-filled intestinal loops with diminished motility in controlled US examination (a,b). Blue arrows show dilation of intestinal loop.