Appendicitis Flashcards
Anatomy of the appendix
The appendix (or vermiform appendix; also cecal [or caecal] appendix; vermix; or vermiform process) is a blind-ended tube connected to the cecum, from which it develops in the embryo. The cecum is a pouchlike structure of the colon, located at the junction of the small and the large intestines.
Pathophysiology of appendicitis
- The appendix base thus lies in the right iliac fossa, close to McBurney’s point.
- initiated by luminal obstruction caused by impacted faeces or a faecolith.
- appendicitis is more common with a low dietary fibre intake
- the mucosa becomes inflamed first. Inflammation eventually extends through the submucosa to involve the muscular and serosal (peritoneal) layers
- fibrinopurulent exudate on the serosal surface extends to any adjacent peritoneal surface, e.g. bowel or abdominal wall, causing localised peritonitis
- By this stage the necrotic glandular mucosa sloughs into the lumen, which becomes distended with pus
- Finally, the end-arteries supplying the appendix thrombose and the infarcted appendix becomes necrotic or gangrenous at the distal end and the appendix begins to disintegrate.
- Perforation soon follows and faecally contaminated contents spread into the peritoneum
Clinical features of appendicitis
- poorly localised, colicky central abdominal visceral pain
- inflammation advances over the ensuing 12–24 hours, it progresses through the appendiceal wall to involve the parietal peritoneum (innervated somatically)
- local peritonitis can be elicited, i.e. tenderness, guarding and rebound tenderness
Other presentations of acute appendicitis
- If appendix lies in the pelvis near the rectum, it may cause local irritation and diarrhoea
- If lies near the bladder or ureter, inflammation may cause urinary frequency, dysuria and (microscopic) pyuria, i.e. leucocytes in the urine
- These findings may be mistakenly interpreted as urinary tract infection
- An inflamed appendix near the Fallopian tube causes pelvic pain suggestive of an acute gynaecological disorder such as salpingitis or torsion of an ovarian cyst
- older patients, a gangrenous or perforated appendix is more likely to be contained by greater omentum or loops of small bowel.
- In the elderly, an appendix abscess is often walled off by loops of small bowel
Making the diagnosis of appendicitis
Cardinal features of acute appendicitis
- Abdominal pain for less than 72 hours
- Vomiting 1–3 times
- Facial flush
- Tenderness concentrated on the right iliac fossa
- Anterior tenderness on rectal examination
- Fever between 37.3 and 38.5°C
- No evidence of urinary tract infection on urine microscopy
Special points in the history and examination
- Acute appendicitis typically runs a short course, between a few hours and about 3 days. If symptoms have been present for longer, appendicitis is unlikely unless an ‘appendix mass’ has developed.
- A recent or current sore throat or viral-type illness, particularly in children, favours a diagnosis of mesenteric adenitis (inflammation of mesenteric lymph nodes analogous to viral tonsillitis).
- Urinary symptoms suggest urinary tract infection but may also occur with pelvic appendicitis.
- Several signs (e.g. Rovsing’s sign—pressure in the left iliac fossa causing pain in the right iliac fossa) are said to point to a diagnosis of appendicitis but all are unreliable.
- One useful test is to ask the child to stand, then to hop on the right leg. If this can be achieved, there is unlikely to be significant peritoneal inflammation.
- Rebound tenderness was traditionally demonstrated by palpating deeply, then suddenly releasing the hand.
- However, this can cause excessive and unexpected pain. A kinder and more precise method is to perform gentle percussion in the right iliac fossa.
Differential diagnosis
- Mesenteric adenitis is a self-limited inflammatory process that affects the mesenteric lymph nodes in the right lower quadrant. Its clinical presentation mimics that of acute appendicitis
- Yersinia ileitis (Yersinia enterocolitica (bacterial species in the family Enterobacteriaceae that most often causes enterocolitis, acute diarrhea, terminal ileitis, mesenteric lymphadenitisand inflamed)
- Meckel’s diverticulum
Scoring system for appendicitis
Management of suspected appendicitis
The ‘grumbling’ appendix
- Recurrent bouts of right iliac fossa pain are often labelled ‘grumbling appendix’.
- These children may have several abortive admissions for abdominal pain and it may eventually be justifiable to remove the appendix to allay parental anxiety.
- A non-inflamed appendix containing a faecolith or threadworms (assumed to have caused the pain) is often found. The pain will be cured in no more than half.
Complications of appendicitis
Intraperitoneal complications:
- Appendix stump blow-out—spillage of colonic contents into the peritoneal cavity
- Generalised peritonitis—perforated or gangrenous appendix, virulent organisms, late presentation or diagnosis
- Abscesses—local, pelvic, subhepatic, subphrenic
- Retained faecolith causing chronic local infection
- Haematoma due to slippage of a vascular ligature or a mesenteric or omental tear
Early or late (even many years later)
- Intestinal obstruction due to adhesions
Late:
- Incisional hernia
Technique of appendicectomy
- Increasingly, laparotomy is being replaced by laparoscopic diagnosis and surgery, but the principles are similar.
- Surgeons performing appendicectomy need to be aware of possible appendiceal neoplasms, present in 0.5—0.9% of appendectomies.
- Most are innocent carcinoid-type tumours but others are mucinous adenocarcinomas.