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Description
A 4-month-old male infant developed respiratory distress, respiratory synchitial virus bronchiolitis with bilateral segmental collapse consolidation of upper zones requiring intraosseous vascular access with left tibial fracture, intubation and difficult mechanical ventilation. He was being treated in paediatric intensive care unit for the past 10 days and required antibiotics, dexamethasone, ribavirin, nitric oxide and high frequency oscillatory ventilation. He then developed abdominal distention, but was tolerating feeds and passing normal stools. His abdomen was soft, non-tender, bowel sounds were normal and all laboratory investigations including inflammatory markers were within normal limits. X-ray abdomen demonstrated pneumoperitoneum (figure 1A). Chest X-ray taken previous day showed right lower zone pneumothorax with a clear rim of pneumomediastinum around heart (figure 1B) and the chest X-ray of the same day revealed flattened hemidiaphragm, shift of mediastinum to the left with pneumomediastinum and pneumoperitoneum (figure 1C). He was treated for the chest infection, but simply observed for pneumoperitoneum clinically and finally recovered well (figure 1D). He is asymptomatic and thriving well at 2-year follow-up.
Pneumoperitoneum in an infant is almost always interpreted as an evidence of rupture of a hollow viscus such as gastrointestinal perforation.1–3 Emergency exploratory laparotomy is generally required in such cases involving bowel perforation.2 Asymptomatic radiologically recognised pneumoperitoneum still remains a diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma, because free intraperitoneal air is not necessarily caused by alimentary tract perforation. Infants with acute respiratory distress and the need for mechanical ventilation may develop pneumoperitoneum in the case of an air leak syndrome. One must keep in mind the possibility of this benign condition and refrain from any interventions including needle aspiration if the patient is stable.
Learning points
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Even if in most cases of massive pneumoperitoneum, the standard treatment is surgical exploration; keeping in mind this rare condition could be useful.
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Nonetheless, high-frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) is thought to reduce air leaks in infants with mechanical ventilation. Therefore, the case per se is interesting, because it demonstrates that pneumoperitoneum can also be induced by HFOV.
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Avoid unnecessary operation in the case of ‘benign’ non-surgical pneumoperitoneum.
Footnotes
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Contributors All authors have been involved in the active clinical management of this patient and have taken part in collection, analysis and interpretation of the data and in writing, revising and submitting the manuscript.
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Competing interests None.
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Patient consent Obtained.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.