| Term 
 
        | Primary peritonitis from peritoneal dialysis. what abx do you use? |  | Definition 
 
        | Treatment: 14 DAYS (or longer if there is fungal infxn) 
 -Vancomycin OR Cefazolin] + [3rd gen Ceph OR Aminoglycoside]
 
 -But she would never use cefazolin with 3rd gen ceph
 
 -Try cefazolin with AG, or vanc and gent/AG, or vanc and 3rd gen ceph.
 
 Don’t have to worry about systemic resistance because it doesn’t get into the blood, and can use smaller amounts bc goes right to site of infx, inflamm will help
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Primary peritonitis from cirrhosis with cites. what abx do you use? |  | Definition 
 
        | Treatment: 5 DAYS + prophylaxis indefinitely(?) 
 Primary: [Cefotaxime]
 
 Alternatives:
 	Add Clinda or metronidazole if anaerobes are suspected OR
 	Other 3rd gen ceph, Extended spectrum pcn(resistant to amp so don’t use), Aztreonam, or Imipenem
 	Aminoglycoside with antipseudomonal pcn
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Primary peritonitis from peritoneal dialysis. What bacteria commonly cause this? |  | Definition 
 
        | Gram Positive skin infections o	S. Epidermidis, S. Aureus, Streptococci, Diptheroids
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Primary peritonitis from cirrhosis with cites. What bacteria commonly cause this? |  | Definition 
 
        | Gram negative o	E. coli (most common)
 o	Haemphilus pneumoniae
 o	Klebsiella
 o	Anaerobes
 o	S. Pneumonia, Pseudomonas
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | What bacteria commonly cause Secondary Peritonitis? |  | Definition 
 
        | Usually polymicrobial 	E. Coli, Bacterioides Fragilis, Enterococcus, Streptococci
 
 Female genital tract: aerobic and anaerobic. Get to peritoneum through fallopian tubes.
 	Lactobacilli, eubacteria, clostridia, anaerobic strep, aerobic strep, staph epidermidis
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Secondary Peritonitis: Community Acquired. How do you treat this ir Mild-Moderate and also if Severe?? |  | Definition 
 
        | Antibiotics: 4-7 DAYS (unless difficult source control, still sick, feverish, etc) 
 Mild to Moderate (monotherapy-do not need to cover enterococcus faecalis!!!)
 o	Ticarcillin-Clavulanate
 o	Cefoxitin
 o	Ertapenem
 o	Moxifloxacin (not as good tho)
 o	Tigecycline
 o	Metronidazole + anyone of these to cover gram neg: Cefazolin, Cefuroxime, 3rd gen Ceph, Levo or Cipro
 
 
 
 High Severity or risk (Combo therapy-must cover enterococcus faecalis!!!!)
 o	Imipenem-cilastatin, meropeneme, doripenem
 o	Piperacillin-tazobactam
 o	Metronidazole + Cefepime or Ceftazidime or Cipro or Levo
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Secondary Peritonitis: Hospital Acquired. How do you treat this? |  | Definition 
 
        | Treat as it was high severity community acquired 	Add antifungal ONLY if Candida grows (it’s normal to have some in GIT)
 	MRSA coverage (if exposure to antibiotics previously or have MRSA) – Vancomycin
 
 
 High Severity or risk (Combo therapy-must cover enterococcus faecalis!!!!)
 o	Imipenem-cilastatin, meropeneme, doripenem
 o	Piperacillin-tazobactam
 o	Metronidazole + Cefepime or Ceftazidime or Cipro or Levo
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Describe Tertiary Peritonitis. |  | Definition 
 
        | -Infection that persists or recurs at least 48 hours after apparently adequate management of primary or secondary peritonitis. 
 -More chronic and complicated
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | What are the predictors of antibiotic failure? |  | Definition 
 
        | Delay in intervention 
 High severity (APACHE ≥15)
 
 old age
 
 comorbidity
 
 degree of organ dysfunction
 
 Low albumin level
 
 Poor nutritional status
 
 Degree of peritoneal involvement or diffuse peritonitis
 
 Inability to achieve adequate debridement or control of drainage,
 
 malignancy
 
 transplant (may be immunosuppressed),
 
 hospital stay prior to operation ≥5 days
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | The following are indicative of _________ Peritonitis. 
 
 Presentation:
 Indolent, N/V, abd tender, low fever, hypoactive bowel sounds, worsening encephalopathy in liver disease cloudy diasylate, fluid culture +, Bacterial on gram stain, inc WBC, Ascitic fluid >300 leukocytes/mm3, etc
 |  | Definition 
 | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | The following are indicative of ______ Peritonitis: 
 
 Presentation:
 	Often acute (SUDDENLY HURTS, like appendicitis), Generalized abdominal pain
 	Tachypnea, Tachycardia
 	N/V, Fever
 	Hypotension & Shock
 	Dec urine output, Hypovolemia
 	Absent bowel sound, Board-like abdomen
 	Leukocytosis
 |  | Definition 
 | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | The following are indicative of ______: 
 : Indolent, Fever often low grade, Leukocytosis, ileus, Abd pain, Abd distension
 |  | Definition 
 
        | Abcess. 
 
 -Falls within category of secondary or tertiary peritonitis
 
 -May occur without preceding generalized peritonitis
 
 -Causes overlap with peritonitis: Appendicitis, Pancreatitis, Pelvic Inflammatory Disease.
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | what drugs do you use for primary and secondary propylaxis? |  | Definition 
 
        | ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin, and bactrim! 
 prophylaxis is specifically for liver dz pts
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