Pneumoperitoneum in a COVID-19 Patient Due to the Macklin Effect.
Título
Pneumoperitoneum in a COVID-19 Patient Due to the Macklin Effect.
Autor
Ramon Vidrio Duarte, Eduardo Vidrio Duarte, Juan Gutierrez Ochoa, Maria Camila Gaviria Leiva, Joaquin A Pimentel-Hayashi
Descripción
A 63-year-old male with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pneumonia presented to the emergency department, supplementary oxygen is delivered via nasal cannula, and invasive ventilation was not needed; there was significant pneumoperitoneum on radiologic control. After a meticulous examination of the thoracic tomography, there were some linear air collections adjacent to the bronchovascular sheaths, indicative of the Macklin effect, without abdominal alterations, and the patient remained stable; therefore, we did not perform a surgical procedure, and the pneumoperitoneum reabsorbed spontaneously on radiologic control. The pulmonary origin of pneumoperitoneum is unusual and is associated with mechanical ventilation and alveolar leak; the air leak with subsequent dissection into other anatomical spaces is called the Macklin effect. It is essential to have this mechanism in mind because most of these patients respond well to conservative treatment. When studying primary pneumoperitoneum, the cause should be studied carefully to discard visceral perforation, tracheal or esophageal rupture.
Fecha
2021
Materia
covid-19, Pneumoperitoneum, barotrauma, macklin effect
Identificador
10.7759/cureus.13200
Fuente
Cureus
Colección
Citación
Ramon Vidrio Duarte, Eduardo Vidrio Duarte, Juan Gutierrez Ochoa, Maria Camila Gaviria Leiva, Joaquin A Pimentel-Hayashi, “Pneumoperitoneum in a COVID-19 Patient Due to the Macklin Effect.,” SOCICT Open, consulta 18 de abril de 2026, https://socictopen.socict.org/items/show/9655.
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