Surgical Questions and Answers

Free Medical and Surgical Questions And Answers

Peritonitis

13. What are the clinical features of peritonitis?

Correct answer: Peritonitis is inevitably secondary to some precipitating lesion, which may itself have definite clinical features, e.g. the onset may be an attack of acute appendicitis or a perforated duodenal ulcer with appropriate symptoms and signs. Early peritonitis is…

Peritonitis

12. What are the pathological features of paralytic ileus?

Correct answer: Loss of fluid; loss of electrolytes; loss of protein.

Peritonitis

11. What are the pathological effects of peritonitis?

Correct answer: (1) Widespread absorption of toxins from the large, inflamed surface. (2) The associated paralytic ileus with: (a) loss of fluid, (b) loss of electrolytes, (c) loss of protein. (3) Gross abdominal distension with elevation of the diaphragm, which…

Peritonitis

9. Which types of bacteria are involved in peritonitis of blood-borne origin?

Correct answer: (1) Tuberculous. (2) Pneumococcal. (3) Streptococcal. (4) Staphylococcal.

Peritonitis

8. Which bacteria are involved in peritonitis of gynaecological origin?

Correct answer: (1) Gonococcus.(2) Chlamydia.(3) Streptococcus.

Peritonitis

7. Which bacteria are involved in peritonitis of bowel origin?

Correct answer: (1) Bacteroides.(2) Pseudomonas.(3) Clostridium.(4) Streptococcus.(5) Proteus.(6) Escherichia coli.(7) Klebsiella.

Peritonitis

6. What is the pathology of peritonitis?

Correct answer: Peritonitis of bowel origin usually shows a mixed faecal flora (Escherichia coli, Streptococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas, Klebsiella and Proteus, together with anaerobic Clostridium and Bacteroides). Gynaecological infections may be chlamydial, gonococcal or streptococcal. Blood-borne peritonitis may be streptococcal, pneumococcal, staphylococcal or tuberculous. In young…

Peritonitis

4. How can bacteria enter the peritoneal cavity via the bloodstream? Which organisms are usually involved?

Correct answer: As part of septicaemia (pneumococcal, streptococcal or staphylococcal). This has wrongly been termed primary peritonitis; in fact, it is secondary to some initial source of infection.