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Ascites & SBP
Ascites is one of the most common complications of cirrhosis seen on medical wards in the NHS.
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is a life-threatening complication that can be subtle and easily missed.
This guide focuses on what doctors actually need to do on the ward and on-call.
What is ascites?
Ascites is the accumulation of fluid in the peritoneal cavity, most commonly due to portal hypertension in cirrhosis.
SBP is infection of ascitic fluid without an obvious intra-abdominal source.
How does it present?
Ascites:
- Abdominal distension
- Discomfort
- Early satiety
- Shortness of breath
- Peripheral oedema
SBP (often subtle):
- Fever
- Abdominal pain or tenderness
- Worsening ascites
- Confusion / encephalopathy
- AKI
- General deterioration
Important:
SBP does not always present with dramatic abdominal pain.
Any unwell cirrhotic with ascites → consider SBP until proven otherwise.
Common causes (think practically)
Ascites is most commonly due to:
- Cirrhosis
- Alcohol-related liver disease
- MASLD / NAFLD
Less commonly:
- Malignancy
- Cardiac failure
- TB peritonitis
SBP occurs in patients with:
- Known cirrhosis and ascites
- Low protein ascites
- Previous SBP
- Recent GI bleed
On the ward, always ask
Has this patient had an ascitic tap?
If not, why not?
Any patient with:
- Cirrhosis + ascites + admission to hospital
should usually have a diagnostic ascitic tap, even if they look well.
First priority = Don’t miss SBP
SBP kills because it is missed, not because it is untreatable.
Think SBP if:
- Cirrhotic patient deteriorates
- New confusion
- Fever
- AKI
- Rising inflammatory markers
- No clear source of sepsis
Immediate management on the ward (what juniors should actually do)
If reviewing a patient with ascites:
Do early:
- Full A–E assessment
- Bloods: FBC, U&E, LFTs, INR, CRP
- Blood cultures if infection suspected
- Perform ascitic tap (or escalate to someone who can)
- Send ascitic fluid for:
- Cell count
- Culture
- Albumin
SBP diagnosis:
- Neutrophils ≥250/mm³ in ascitic fluid = SBP (treat immediately)
Do not wait for cultures.
If SBP suspected or confirmed
Start:
- IV antibiotics (e.g. ceftriaxone as per local guideline)
- IV albumin (reduces risk of renal failure)
- Monitor renal function closely
- Early gastro involvement
SBP is a medical emergency.
When to escalate
Escalate urgently if:
- Hypotension
- AKI
- Encephalopathy
- Rising lactate
- NEWS ≥5
- Concerned nursing staff
These patients may require:
- HDU/ICU
- Vasopressors
- Renal support
Common mistakes juniors make
- Not performing ascitic tap
- Waiting for imaging before tapping
- Assuming ascites = “chronic problem”
- Missing SBP in confused patients
- Delayed antibiotics
- Forgetting albumin
Take-home concept
In cirrhosis, ascites is common — but SBP is deadly.
If a patient with ascites is unwell, tap early, treat early, and escalate early.