Appendicitis Flashcards

1
Q

Acute appendicitis - background

A
  1. Def = acute inflammation of vermiform appendix
  2. Epi = may occur at any age, but rare under 5y. Commonest abdominal emergency in children, affecting 1/6 of the population
  3. . Begins with obstruction of lumen of appendix, often by fecolith ( -> vague central abdominal pain)
  4. After 6-12hrs, an inflammatory process involves the full thickness of the wall of the appendix
  5. After a further 24-36hrs, the appendix will become gangrenous and perforate
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2
Q

Acute appendicitis - symptoms (3)

A
  1. Anorexia
  2. Vomiting (usually only a few times)
  3. Abdominal pain, initially central and colicky (appendicular midgut colic) but then localising to the R iliac fossa (from localised peritoneal inflammation)
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3
Q

Acute appendicitis - signs

A
  1. Flushed face with oral fetor
  2. Low grade fever
  3. Abdominal pain aggravated by movement (e.g. walking, coughing, bumps on the road during a car journey)
  4. Persistent tenderness with guarding in the RIF (McBurney’s point)
  5. Guarding = involuntary spasm in the muscles of the abdominal wall due to peritoneal irritation
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4
Q

Acute appendicitis - ix/dx (3)

A

**Dx made clinically

Other ix:

  1. U/S - if dx uncertain but child likely to have appendicitis
  2. Urinalysis (note - abnormal in 1/3 of children with acute appendicitis; avoid starting abx for presumptive dx of UTI unless there are symptoms of dysuria)
  3. Lab studies rarely helpful, but can perform FBE (typically raised WCC)
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5
Q

Acute appendicitis - mx

A
  1. Appendectomy with laparoscopic approach, plus:
  2. Preoperative preparation - adequate hydration with IV crystalloids + correction of electrolyte abnormalities
  3. Urethral catheter if child severely dehydrated, NGT if child has persistent vomiting
  4. Analgesia (IV opioids), abx = gentamicin + amoxycillin + metronidazole IV
  5. Oral fluids can be introduced as soon as child is awake. Solid food as tolerated. Discharge within 24-48hrs
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