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Massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving.

Pneumoperitoneum usually indicates rupture of a hollow viscus and considered a surgical emergency. But air may also enter the peritoneum from the lung or the genital organs in female without visceral perforation. While scuba diving, the rapid ascent is usually controlled by placing in a decompressio...

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Autores principales: Oh, Seung-Tak, Kim, Wook, Jeon, Hae-Myung, Kim, Jeong-Soo, Kim, Kee-Whan, Yoo, Seung-Jin, Kim, Eung-Kuk
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3055021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12692430
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author Oh, Seung-Tak
Kim, Wook
Jeon, Hae-Myung
Kim, Jeong-Soo
Kim, Kee-Whan
Yoo, Seung-Jin
Kim, Eung-Kuk
author_facet Oh, Seung-Tak
Kim, Wook
Jeon, Hae-Myung
Kim, Jeong-Soo
Kim, Kee-Whan
Yoo, Seung-Jin
Kim, Eung-Kuk
author_sort Oh, Seung-Tak
collection PubMed
description Pneumoperitoneum usually indicates rupture of a hollow viscus and considered a surgical emergency. But air may also enter the peritoneum from the lung or the genital organs in female without visceral perforation. While scuba diving, the rapid ascent is usually controlled by placing in a decompression chamber and the excess gas volume is exhaled. Failure to allow this excess gas to escape will result in overdistension of air passage, which may rupture resulting in pulmonary interstitial emphysema or, if air enters the circulation, air embolus can occur. Pneumo-peritoneum is a rare complication of diving accidents. While the majority of cases are not related to an intraabdominal catastrophy, more than 20% have been the result of gastric rupture. We report a 42-yr-old male patient with massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving, who presented himself with dyspnea and abdominal distension. Knowledge of this rare condition and its benign course may allow the emergency physician and surgeon to order appropriate studies to help avoid unnecessary surgical treatment. It is important to determine promptly whether the air emanated from a ruptured viscus or was introduced from an extraperitoneal source. Free air in the abdomen does not always indicate a ruptured intra-abdominal viscus.
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spelling pubmed-30550212011-03-15 Massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving. Oh, Seung-Tak Kim, Wook Jeon, Hae-Myung Kim, Jeong-Soo Kim, Kee-Whan Yoo, Seung-Jin Kim, Eung-Kuk J Korean Med Sci Research Article Pneumoperitoneum usually indicates rupture of a hollow viscus and considered a surgical emergency. But air may also enter the peritoneum from the lung or the genital organs in female without visceral perforation. While scuba diving, the rapid ascent is usually controlled by placing in a decompression chamber and the excess gas volume is exhaled. Failure to allow this excess gas to escape will result in overdistension of air passage, which may rupture resulting in pulmonary interstitial emphysema or, if air enters the circulation, air embolus can occur. Pneumo-peritoneum is a rare complication of diving accidents. While the majority of cases are not related to an intraabdominal catastrophy, more than 20% have been the result of gastric rupture. We report a 42-yr-old male patient with massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving, who presented himself with dyspnea and abdominal distension. Knowledge of this rare condition and its benign course may allow the emergency physician and surgeon to order appropriate studies to help avoid unnecessary surgical treatment. It is important to determine promptly whether the air emanated from a ruptured viscus or was introduced from an extraperitoneal source. Free air in the abdomen does not always indicate a ruptured intra-abdominal viscus. Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 2003-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3055021/ /pubmed/12692430 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Oh, Seung-Tak
Kim, Wook
Jeon, Hae-Myung
Kim, Jeong-Soo
Kim, Kee-Whan
Yoo, Seung-Jin
Kim, Eung-Kuk
Massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving.
title Massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving.
title_full Massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving.
title_fullStr Massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving.
title_full_unstemmed Massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving.
title_short Massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving.
title_sort massive pneumoperitoneum after scuba diving.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3055021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12692430
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