Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Acute appendicitis
- epdiemiology
- commonest cause of abdo pain in
childhood needing surgical intervention
- occurs @ any age
- but common in age 3 +
- clinical features of uncomplicated aa
- Sx
- anorexia
- vomiting
- usually only a few times
- abdo pain
- initially central and colicky
- appendicular midgut colic
- then localises to right iliac fossa
- from localised peritoneal inflammation
- signs
- flushed face w/ oral fetor
- low grade fever: 37.2-38 deg C
- abdo pain
aggravated by
movement
- e.g. walking,
coughing,
bumps on road
when in car
- persistent tenderness w/
guarding in right iliac
fossa (McBurney's point)
- guarding may be absent
- retrocaecal appendix
- few abdo signs present w/ pelvic appendix
- BE AWARE OF PRESCHOOL KIDS
- diagnosis harder
- esp early in disease
- faecoliths commoner
- visible on plain abdo xray
- perforation may be rapid
- 'cause
omentum
less well
developed
- fails to surround appendix
- signs easy to
underestimate
- Mx
- repeated
observation &
clinical review
- v important
- to make right diag
- appendicitis is progressive
- every few hours
- appendicectomy
- uncomplicated appendicitis
- straightforward
- complicated appendicitis
- if guarding present
(consistent w/
perforation)
- fluid resus and iv
Abx before laparotomy
- if palpable mass in right iliac fossa
- and no signs of generalised peritonitis
- conservative Mx
- iv Abx
- appendicectomy in a few weeks
- if sx progress, laparotomy
- Ix
- no lab or imaging is
consistently helpful for
diagnosis
- neutrophilia not always present on FBC
- WBCs or orgs in urine
can be present in
appendicitis
- inflamed appendix
can be adj to
ureter or bladder
- ultrasound
- may support clinical diag
- show thickened, non-compressible
appendix w/ increased blood flow
- show complications of appendicitis
- abscess
- perforation
- appendix mass
- exclude other pathology
- laparoscopy
- in some centres
- to see if appendix inflamed
- complicated appendicitis
- presence of appendix mass
- abscess
- perforation