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Table 4 Abdominal characteristics of the patients

From: Diagnostic implications of soluble triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome and abdominal diseases: a preliminary observational study

Case

IAP, mm Hg

Neutrophils in peritoneal fluid, mm3

Glucose in peritoneal fluid, mg/dL

Peritoneal fluid microbiology

Peritoneal sTREM-1, pg/mL

Abdominal infection

Type of infection

1

 

130

 

Salmonella tiphy

305

Yes

Hepatic abscesses

3

15

1,670

228

Polymicrobial

2,871

Yes

Colitis CMV

4

18

0

179

Negative

482

No

 

5

18

  

Acinetobacter baumannii

935

Yes

Enteritis

6

 

103

154

A. baumannii

1,242

Yes

Pancreatic infection

7

18

10

238

Negative

445

No

 

8

 

10

128

Negative

288

No

 

9

13

30

45

Negative

459

No

 

10

22

12,700

 

Negative

3,474

Yes

Pancreatic infection

11

 

16

248

Negative

227

No

 

12

15

0

127

Enterococcus faecalis

3,267

Yes

Pancreatic infection

13

11

544

93

Negative

1,423

Yes

SBP

14

11

  

Negative

2,250

Yes

Enteritisa

15

7

462

34

Negative

1,633

Yes

SBP

16

17

0

186

Negative

933

Yes

Enteritisb

17

   

Candida krusei,

Enterococcus faecium

3,634

Yes

Enteritisc

18

11

51

169

Negative

305

No

 

19

25

249

108

Negative

301

No

 

20

14

10

 

Negative

854

No

 

21

14

148

285

Negative

174

No

 

22

12

4,365

30

Escherichia coli

4,406

Yes

SBP

  1. Patient 2 was removed from the analyses because of our inability to aspirate peritoneal fluid. aDiagnosed from surgical findings; bdiagnosed from necropsy findings; cclinical and microbiological diagnoses. CMV, cytomegalovirus; IAP, intra-abdominal pressure; SBP, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis; sTREM-1, soluble triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 1.