Spontaneous or nonsurgical pneumoperitoneum: A retrospective study with a review of literature by Saumya Chopra in Journal of Clinical Case Reports Medical Images and Health Sciences

Spontaneous or nonsurgical pneumoperitoneum: A retrospective study with a review of literature by Saumya Chopra in   Journal of Clinical Case Reports Medical Images and Health Sciences

Abstract 

Background: Free air in the peritoneal cavity is called pneumoperitoneum. It is an emergency that requires immediate laparotomy. It is present in about 90% of the cases with a hollow viscous perforation. On the other hand, spontaneous, nonsurgical or idiopathic pneumoperitoneum is a benign surgical entity that needs no immediate surgery. It is a diagnostic dilemma for the surgeon as the clinical presentation and radiological findings imitate perforated viscous and may result in unnecessary laparotomy. History and physical examination are very important to rule out visceral perforation. A diagnostic peritoneal lavage, CECT, contrast studies, or laparoscopic evaluation can help prevent a patient from having unnecessary laparotomy. 

Methodology: This retrospective study was done from Jan 2021 to June 2022. Fifty cases of pneumoperitoneum due to visceral perforation were admitted during this period. Only one case of spontaneous pneumoperitoneum was reported with a diagnostic dilemma treated conservatively.

 Conclusion: his retrospective study identifies the presence of such a surgical entity, which can be managed conservatively, thus preventing the needless surgical burden of morbidity and mortality.

Introduction

 Pneumoperitoneum is described as free air under the diaphragm 1. Intraperitoneal free air indicates hollow viscous perforation in over 90% of the patients, which is considered a surgical emergency. Rarely, the presence of pneumoperitoneum may not be due to intra-abdominal perforations (10 -15%) and thus may not require unnecessary emergency exploratory laparotomy. Such a condition poses a diagnostic dilemma to treating surgeons or ICU critical care team and is termed a "nonsurgical", "spontaneous", or "idiopathic" pneumoperitoneum. The causes may be intrathoracic, intra-abdominal, gynaecological and idiopathic2,3. Emergency surgical intervention is important in patients with perforated viscous as delay may cause major morbidity and mortality due to sepsis, third space volume shift resulting in shock and multiple organ dysfunction syndrome4. The surgeons tend to operate at the earliest for pneumoperitoneum due to suspected perforated viscous. The patients might undergo unnecessary surgical intervention in case of spontaneous pneumoperitoneum, adding morbidity to the already sick patients. The decision to go for laparotomy cannot be made solely on the presence of pneumoperitoneum without any signs of peritonitis. In cases of high suspicion of perforated viscus, laparoscopy provides a good diagnostic and therapeutic tool. So, surgeons must know about this rare "spontaneous pneumoperitoneum" entity and should avoid unnecessary laparotomy. Hereby, we present a case of a middle-aged patient with spontaneous pneumoperitoneum managed conservatively.

Material & Method

 This retrospective study was conducted from Jan 2021 to June 2022 at ESIC Medical College in Faridabad, India. Fifty cases of pneumoperitoneum due to visceral perforation were admitted to the surgery department during this period. All except one presented with features of peritonitis. This patient presented with no abdominal symptoms or signs and faced a diagnostic dilemma.

Case Report 

 A 50-year male underwent Percutaneous Coronary Intervention stenting 4 years back for coronary disease. He has been maintaining well since then, when he presented to the casualty department with pain in the precordium for one day for admission and evaluation under the Cardiology department. There was a history of open cholecystectomy 20 years back. ECG, Echocardiography, cardiac enzymes and other cardiac causes were within normal limits. Chest X-ray showed significant free air under the diaphragm. On examination, there was no tachycardia, hypotension or fever: no abdominal signs or symptoms of peritonitis. Total leukocyte counts and ESR were within the normal limit. X-ray chest, including the upper abdomen, showed air under the right dome of the diaphragm. CECT Thorax and Abdomen with oral and IV contrast revealed free air under the diaphragm and no bowel leak [Fig-1A, B, C]. Delayed films were also taken, which showed no leak to the rectum. Patient photo and Xray Abdomen at presentation are also shown. [Fig-2A, B] Diagnostic laparoscopy ruled out visceral perforation, and the patient managed conservatively.Pneumoperitoneum, or gas in the peritoneal cavity, is a surgical emergency in adults and children. In about >90% of cases, perforated intra-abdominal viscous, e.g. peptic ulcer, Meckel's diverticulum, toxic megacolon, necrotizing enterocolitis, Crohn's disease, and/or perforation of the bowel due to trauma or tumours, are responsible for pneumoperitoneum3. The entity of 'benign', 'spontaneous', 'nonsurgical', 'asymptomatic', or 'idiopathic' pneumoperitoneum is reported in the literature, which, when identified, needs conservative management onlySurprisingly, not all hollow viscous perforations result in pneumoperitoneum, and about 69% of the cases of gut perforation are present with air under the diaphragm on X-Ray 4. This can happen due to spontaneous perforation sealing with invisible minimal gas leakage. Similarly, all pneumoperitoneum is not due to perforated viscus. The decision to go for laparotomy cannot be made solely on the presence of pneumoperitoneum without signs of peritonitis. Such cases in the literature are explained as nonsurgical pneumoperitoneum or spontaneous pneumoperitoneum Most nonsurgical (spontaneous) pneumoperitoneum cases may occur as a procedural complication or a complication of medical intervention. The most common abdominal aetiology of NSP can be retained postoperative air (prevalence 25% to 60%). NSP frequently occurs after peritoneal dialysis catheter placement (10% to 34%) and gastrointestinal endoscopic procedures (0.3% to 25%, varying by procedure)7. The pathophysiology of spontaneous pneumoperitoneum is unclear. When intra-thoracic pressure increases, air may dissect its way downwards along the oesophagus and aorta into the retroperitoneal tissue [12/8]. The air can also dissect through the diaphragm defects in the posterolateral region secondary to arrest in the closure of the pleuroperitoneal canal and diaphragmatic defects at the sternocostal and lumbo-coastal region [13/9]. Another suggested theory is that there are micro-perforations (2 to 4 mm) in the anterior wall of the stomach, which can cause pneumoperitoneum. [14/10]

The causes of spontaneous pneumoperitoneum can be divided into: 

1) Intrathoracic,

 2) Abdominal, 

3) Gynaecological and

 4) Idiopathic

Thoracic: Pneumothorax, pleuroperitoneal fistula, pneumomediastinum due to thoracic trauma, barotraumas, cardiopulmonary resuscitation and pneumonia.

Abdominal: Abdominal causes include pneumatosiscystoides intestinalis. In this disease, gas-filled submucosal or subserosal cysts are mostly found in the terminal ileum and are the most important cause. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy, emphysematous cholecystitis and post-surgical pneumoperitoneum are other possible causes. 

Gynecological: Forceful coitus, vaginal douching, pelvic inflammatory disease & postpartum knee-chest exercise are possible gynaecological causes [9,11/11].

Idiopathic: In the current era of increasing critical care, ventilator management and COVID cases, idiopathic pneumoperitoneum is no longer a diagnosis of exclusion. It should be kept in mind while evaluating critically ill patients in ICU with sepsis and ventilator support. If feasible, moving ahead with exploratory laparotomy must be planned after cross-sectional imaging with oral and IV contrast. Reviewing the literature revealed that watchful waiting is important with favourable outcomes. It also helps decrease hospital stays and avoid unnecessary surgeries with related morbidity and mortality. Conservative treatment was successful in Idiopathic cases without signs of peritonitis. [8/13]

Review of literature for spontaneous pneumoperitoneum:

 Management 

This condition is demanding as most cases are misdiagnosed as perforated viscus resulting in immediate laparotomy. The literature review advocates for conservative management if peritoneal signs of visceral perforation are absent. Whereas if peritoneal signs of perforation are present, then laparotomy is necessary. Avoid negative exploratory laparotomy in patients with spontaneous pneumoperitoneum and thus save the patients from unnecessary morbidity [10/22]. Diagnostic laparoscopy is a good diagnostic and therapeutic tool in a hemodynamically stable patient with pneumoperitoneum without obvious features of viscera perforation. It will prevent unnecessary exploratory laparotomy with morbidity in already sick patients, especially in the COVID era, when many patients need prolonged ICU stay and mechanical ventilation (both risk factors for spontaneous pneumoperitoneum).[21] However, the use of diagnostic laparoscopy in such cases is quite limited in the literature.

Conclusion 

Spontaneous pneumoperitoneum means air under the diaphragm without hollow viscous perforation. It is an uncommon surgical entity and is a diagnostic dilemma in the patient without signs of peritonitis where the X-Ray shows gas under the diaphragm. The treating surgeon should maintain a high index of suspicion for nonsurgical causes of pneumoperitoneum and recognize that conservative management may be indicated in many cases. In stable patients with elements of pneumoperitoneum, diagnostic laparoscopy can be considered to rule out visceral perforations. In patients with features of peritonitis, laparotomy is justified.

 For more information: JCRMHS 

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