Acute appendicitis Flashcards
A 25 year old man presents with a two week history of right iliac fossa pain and intermittent fevers. His BP is 120/72 mmHg, PR 64/min and T 36.4°C. Examination reveals evidence of a 6cm right iliac fossa mass. There is tenderness over the mass but nowhere else on the abdomen. How would you assess and manage him?
Impression
Given the systemic features of infection, and examination findings of focal tenderness and abdominal mass in the RIF, I am concerned about a complicated appendicitis with abscess/phlegmon formation.
Ddx include other causes of RIF pain and abdo mass
- GIT: complicated hernia, bowel obstruction, appendices tumour, rule out other GIT malignancy, cholecystitis (wrong clinical picture)
- Renal: nephrolithiasis, malignancy
- infective: psoas abscess
- gynaecological (if female)
Goals
- Conduct A to E assessment, ensure HD stability and no acute peritonitis
- Contact gen surg for consult, likely arrange theatres for laparoscopic appendicectomy, or trial of conservative management with bridging ABx (Depends on underlying aetiology).
Appendicitis - History
History
- Sx: RIF pain, SOCRATES, systemic features of infection (fevers, night sweats, tachy, palpitations etc), urinary/Bowel movement changes, characterise the mass, nausea/vomiting/anorexia/diarrhoea
- REDS: peritonitis (pain going over bumps into hospital),
- risks: recent illnesses (lymphoid hyperplasia), low fibre diet (faecolith)
- PSHx, PMHx, medications, allergies, last meal
Appendicitis - Examination
Examination
- General appearance + vitals: Hd status, endofthebedogram
- abdo exam: focal tenderness vs peritonitis (?acute abdomen), rovings signs, McBurney’s point tenderness, shifting dullness, bowel sound, Psoas vs obturator sign
Appendicitis - Investigations
Investigations
Is usually a clinical diagnosis.
Bedside: VBG if concerns for HD instability, UA + MCS
Bloods: FBC, UEC, LFT, CRP/ESR (esp if for conservative management), blood cultures given fevers, rest of septic screen if indicated on History, pre-op bloods if surgery indicated.
- Imaging: abdo ultrasound (evidence of phlegmon, etc), CT abdomen, upright AXR for air under diaphragm as evidence of perforation.
Appendicitis - Management
Management
If concern about peritonitis/ acute abdomen, would want urgent surgical review with likely disposition being theatres for laparoscopy +/- laparotomy.
Given stem does not show vitals of HD instability or evidence of generalised peritonitis, am not concerned for this.
Supportive
- Surgical consult
- analgesia, antipyretics, antiemetics
- correct any fluid/electrolyte imbalance (esp if any vomiting)
- keep NBM
- pre-op surgical consent if appropriate
- regular monitoring/observation
Definitive:
- Phlegmon: supportive therapy as appendix is usually destroyed and necrosed. ABx therapy
- If Abscess: >3cm then percutaneous drainage, but less then 3cm then supportive ABx then appendicectomy later down the track once inflammation has subsided.
- ABX: either bridge to surgery or mainstay of treatment (gent, amp, metro - if per then IV, if not the PO)
- laparoscopic appendicectomy; either in acute setting if indicated due to deterioration, or in outpatient setting once infection has subsided.
- Histopathology of resection to rule out carcinoid tumour/other appendices malignancy
- US-guided abscess drainage (by IR)
- Document, inform family