## Correct Answer: B. Resuscitation and laparotomy The clinical presentation of acute-onset severe abdominal pain with a chest X-ray showing **pneumoperitoneum** (free air under the diaphragm) is pathognomonic for a **perforated viscus**—most commonly a perforated peptic ulcer, but also perforated appendix, perforated colon, or perforated small bowel. The patient is hemodynamically stable at presentation, which is crucial: this is NOT a contraindication to surgery; rather, it is the ideal window for intervention. The discriminating fact is that **pneumoperitoneum + acute abdominal pain = surgical emergency requiring immediate resuscitation and exploratory laparotomy**. Management follows the principle of "resuscitate and operate": establish two large-bore IV lines, initiate fluid resuscitation (crystalloids per Indian Surgical Association guidelines), cross-match blood, insert a urinary catheter for monitoring, and proceed urgently to the operating theatre for exploratory laparotomy. The goal is to identify the perforation site, control contamination, and perform definitive repair (primary closure for peptic ulcer perforation with omental patch, or resection for gangrenous/perforated bowel). Delay in surgical intervention increases mortality from peritonitis and sepsis. In the Indian context, peptic ulcer perforation remains the most common cause of pneumoperitoneum, particularly in patients with NSAID use or H. pylori infection. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Tracheostomy** — Tracheostomy is an airway procedure with no role in acute abdominal perforation. This is a distractor that confuses respiratory management with surgical emergencies. The patient is hemodynamically stable and has no airway compromise; tracheostomy would delay definitive surgical management and increase morbidity. **C. Gastric lavage** — Gastric lavage is contraindicated in acute abdominal perforation because it may increase intra-abdominal pressure and worsen peritoneal contamination. This is an NBE trap: students may confuse it with upper GI bleeding management. In perforation, the stomach is already decompressed by the perforation itself; lavage adds no diagnostic or therapeutic value and risks further spillage. **D. Chest tube insertion** — Chest tube insertion is indicated for pneumothorax or hemothorax, not pneumoperitoneum. While free air may appear under the diaphragm on chest X-ray, it is intra-abdominal, not intra-thoracic. This option confuses radiological findings with thoracic pathology and delays the definitive surgical intervention required for abdominal perforation. ## High-Yield Facts - **Pneumoperitoneum** on chest X-ray (free air under diaphragm) is pathognomonic for **perforated viscus** until proven otherwise. - **Perforated peptic ulcer** is the most common cause of pneumoperitoneum in India, followed by perforated appendix and perforated colon. - **Hemodynamic stability does NOT delay surgery**—it is the ideal window for resuscitation and urgent laparotomy to prevent septic shock. - **Resuscitation protocol**: two large-bore IVs, crystalloid bolus (20 mL/kg), cross-match, urinary catheter, NPO status, broad-spectrum antibiotics (ceftriaxone + metronidazole per Indian guidelines). - **Definitive management**: exploratory laparotomy with identification of perforation site; primary closure with omental patch for peptic ulcer, resection for gangrenous bowel. - **Delay in surgery increases mortality** from peritonitis and sepsis; every hour of delay worsens outcome in perforation peritonitis. ## Mnemonics **PERFORATION MANAGEMENT: RESUS-OP** **R**esuscitate (fluids, blood, antibiotics) → **E**xamine (confirm diagnosis) → **S**urgery (laparotomy) → **U**rgency (no delay) → **S**upport (ICU if needed) → **O**perate (repair perforation) → **P**ostoperative care. **FREE AIR = SURGERY (not observation)** **F**ree air under diaphragm → **R**esuscitate immediately → **E**xplore abdomen → **E**mergency laparotomy. Hemodynamic stability is NOT a reason to delay—it is the BEST time to operate. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs pneumoperitoneum with chest imaging to lure students into selecting chest-based interventions (tracheostomy, chest tube). The trap is confusing radiological location (air visible on chest X-ray) with anatomical location (air is intra-abdominal, not intra-thoracic). Additionally, students may hesitate to operate on a "hemodynamically stable" patient, not realizing that stability is the ideal window for surgery before decompensation. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian surgical practice, a patient with acute severe abdominal pain and pneumoperitoneum on chest X-ray is taken directly to the operating theatre after brief resuscitation (15–30 minutes). Delay for CT or further imaging is avoided because the diagnosis is already made radiologically, and every minute counts in preventing septic shock and multi-organ failure from peritonitis. _Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery, Ch. 65 (Acute Abdomen); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 297 (Acute Intestinal Obstruction and Perforation)_
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