Liver: Bacterial Peritonitis Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis (SBP) BasicsInfection of Ascitic Fluid without Intraabdominal Surgically Treatable SourceCause: Impaired Host DefensesDeficits in Cirrhosis:Phagocyte DysfunctionComplement DeficiencyIncreased Free Iron for Growth (Normally Inhibited by Unsaturated Transferrin)Bacteria Seed by Translocation in Gut or From Any Infected SiteOrganismsUsually Single OrganismMost Common Organism: E. coli (#1), Klebsiella & PneumococciMost Common in Peds: Pneumococcal & StreptococcalMost Common in Peritoneal Dialysis: S. epidermidisPrognosisOverall Mortality High (20-40%)Best Predictors of Mortality: Renal Dysfunction & MELD ScoreLow Mortality if Treatment Initiated EarlyPresentationFeverAbdominal PainDiarrheaCloudy Fluid OutputDiagnosisDx: Paracentesis (PMN ≥ 250)May Also Use Fluid CxTreatmentPrimary Tx: Paracentesis (“Tap Until Dry”) & Cefotaxime (High Levels in Ascitic Fluid)Alternative ABX: Ceftriaxone or FluoroquinolonesOther Considerations:If Renal Dysfunction Present: IV Albumin Decreases MortalityStop Nonselective Beta-Blockers (Higher Mortality Risk)Peritoneal Dialysis Tx: Intraperitoneal Antibiotics for 2 weeks (Better Than IV)If Fails: Remove CatheterFungal Infection Requires Catheter RemovalProphylaxisIndications:Hx of SBPCirrhosis & GI BleedCirrhosis, Ascitic Fluid Protein < 1.5 g/dL & Renal Impairment or Liver FailureABX: Trimethoprim-Sulfamethoxazole or Fluoroquinolones (Norfloxacin) Secondary Bacterial Peritonitis BasicsInfection of Ascitic Fluid with Intraabdominal Surgically Treatable SourceUsually PolymicrobialMost Common Cause: Perforated BowelTreatmentTx: Cefotaxime & Metronidazole (Broader Coverage Indicated)