Perihepatitis
Liver disease
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Perihepatitis is inflammation of the serous or peritoneal coating of the liver.
Perihepatitis is often caused by one of the inflammatory disorders of the female upper genital tract, known collectively as pelvic inflammatory disease.
Presentation
Some patients have sharp right upper abdominal quadrant pain. One of the complications of perihepatitis is Fitz-Hugh–Curtis syndrome.[1]
Etiology
Common bacterial causes for this disease are Chlamydia trachomatis[2] and Neisseria gonorrhoeae.[3]