Appendicitis: Difference between revisions

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== Treatment ==
== Treatment ==
Patients who present 24 to 72 hours after the onset of symptoms usually undergo immediate appendectomy. In contrast, patients who present with a longer duration of symptoms (more than five days) and have findings localized to the right lower quadrant should be treated initially with antibiotics, intravenous fluids, and bowel rest.
#NPO
#NPO
#Fluid resuscitation
#Fluid resuscitation
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###Imipenem 500mg IV Q6hr
###Imipenem 500mg IV Q6hr
#Surgery
#Surgery
##An appendectomy is performed by the conventional open laparotomy approach or by laparoscopy.
##The most common complication following appendectomy is infection (either a simple wound infection or an intraabdominal abscess). Both occur typically in patients with perforated appendicitis; they are very rare in those with simple appendicitis


== Disposition ==
== Disposition ==

Revision as of 17:14, 16 August 2013

Background

  • Most common nonobstetric surgical emergency in pregnancy
  • Most commonly caused by luminal obstruction by a fecalith
  • There are no historical or physical exam findings that can definitively rule out appy

Clinical Features

  • Early on primarily malaise, indigestion, anorexia
    • Later pt develops abdominal pain
      • Initially vague, periumbilical (visceral innervation)
      • Later migrates to McBurney point (parietal innervation)
  • Nausea, w/ or w/o emesis, typically follows onset of pain
  • Fever may or not occur
  • Urinary symptoms common given proximity of appendix to urinary tract (sterile pyuria)
  • Sudden improvement suggests perforation
  • 33% of pts have atypical presentation
    • Retrocecal appendix can cause flank or pelvic pain
    • Gravid uterus sometimes displaces appendix superiorly -> RUQ pain

Physical Exam

  • Rovsing sign (palpation of LLQ worsens RLQ pain)
  • Psoas sign (extension of R leg at hip while pt lies on L side elicits abd pain)
  • Obturator sign (internal and external rotation of thigh at hip elicits pain
  • Peritonitis suggested by:
    • Right heel strike elicits pain
    • Guarding

Clinical Examination Operating Characteristics

Procedure LR+ LR-
RLQ pain 7.3-8.4 0-0.28
Rigidity 3.76 0.82
Migration 3.18 0.50
Pain before vomiting 2.76 NA
Psoas sign 2.38 0.90
Fever 1.94 0.58
Rebound 1.1-6.3 0-0.86
Guarding 1.65-1.78 0-0.54
No similar pain previously 1.5 0.32
Anorexia 1.27 0.64
Nausea 0.69-1.2 0.70-0.84
Vomiting 0.92 1.12

DDx

Abdominal Pain#RLQ

Diagnosis

  1. Labs
    1. CBC
      1. Normal WBC does not rule-out appy
    2. UA
      1. Sterile pyuria or hematuria c/w appy
    3. Urine pregnancy
    4. CRP
      1. Normal CRP AND WBC makes appy very unlikely
  2. Imaging
    1. Early sx consultation should be obtained before imaging in straightforward cases
    2. Not universally necessary; consider in:
      1. Women of reproductive age
      2. Men w/ equivocal presentation
    3. Perforation may result in false negative study
    4. Modality
      1. US
        1. First choice for pregnant women and children
        2. Findings: noncompressible appendix >6mm in diameter
      2. CT
        1. First choice for adult males and nonpregnant women w/ equivocal cases
          1. Women derive the greatest benefit from preoperative imaging (lower neg appy rate)
        2. Contrast (both PO and IV) is unncessary

Treatment

Patients who present 24 to 72 hours after the onset of symptoms usually undergo immediate appendectomy. In contrast, patients who present with a longer duration of symptoms (more than five days) and have findings localized to the right lower quadrant should be treated initially with antibiotics, intravenous fluids, and bowel rest.

  1. NPO
  2. Fluid resuscitation
  3. Analgesia/antiemetics
  4. Abx
    1. Must cover aerobic and anaerobic gran negatives
    2. Simple appendicitis
      1. Cefoxitin 2gm IV Q6hr OR
      2. Ampicillin-sulbactam 3gm IV QID OR
      3. Ciprofloxacin 400mg IV BID OR
      4. Metronidazole 500mg IV Q6hr + cefuroxime 1.5gm IV x1; then 750mg IV TID
    3. Complicated appendicitis (perforation, gangrene, abscess, immunocompromised)
      1. Piperacillin/tazobactam 4.5gm IV Q6hr OR
      2. Metronidazole 500mg IV Q6hr + aztreonam 2gm IV TID OR
      3. Cefepime 2gm IV BID OR
      4. Ciprofloxacin 400mg IV BID OR
      5. Imipenem 500mg IV Q6hr
  5. Surgery
    1. An appendectomy is performed by the conventional open laparotomy approach or by laparoscopy.
    2. The most common complication following appendectomy is infection (either a simple wound infection or an intraabdominal abscess). Both occur typically in patients with perforated appendicitis; they are very rare in those with simple appendicitis

Disposition

  • ED obs versus 12hr f/u
    • Stable, nontoxic, adequate pain control, tolerating PO, no comorbidities

See Also

Appendicitis (Peds)

Source

Tintinalli