Benign Pneumoperitoneum Following Mitral Valve Replacement
Ali Tariq Alvi, Luis E Santiago, Murali Shankar, Pallavi Aneja

TL;DR
A 63-year-old woman developed a rare case of harmless pneumoperitoneum after mitral valve surgery, which was managed conservatively without surgery.
Contribution
This paper presents a rare case of benign pneumoperitoneum following cardiac surgery, highlighting the possibility of non-surgical management.
Findings
Pneumoperitoneum was observed post-mitral valve replacement but showed no signs of gastrointestinal tract perforation.
Conservative management was successful as the pneumoperitoneum decreased in size over time.
The case underscores the importance of monitoring for abdominal complications after cardiac surgery.
Abstract
The pneumoperitoneum refers to the presence of free air inside the abdominal cavity. This finding is usually a sequela of a gastrointestinal tract perforation. Still, in rare instances, it can present after cardiac surgery due to the proximity of the peritoneal cavity and pericardium, allowing air to enter the peritoneal cavity. Our patient was a 63-year-old female who initially presented for revision of the mitral valve replacement. A chest X-ray on postoperative day 13 revealed a 6.6 cm lucency under the right diaphragm suggestive of pneumoperitoneum. She was discharged after serial chest X-rays revealed a decrease in the size of the pneumoperitoneum. Twelve days later, our patient was readmitted, as another chest X-ray revealed that the size of the pneumoperitoneum was again increasing. An endoscopy was performed, but it did not reveal any lesions or etiology that would lead to a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAbdominal Surgery and Complications · Pneumothorax, Barotrauma, Emphysema · Appendicitis Diagnosis and Management
