disease of the small bowel and appendix Flashcards
appendicitis - blood supply
-appendicular artery
appendicitis - who gets it ?
rare in infancy, usually childhood / young adulthood, another peak however in the elderly, men are more likely than women to get it (3:2) before the age of 25 - after 25 its equal 1:1
what is the relevance of McBurney’s point and appendicitis ?
this is the right iliac fossa 1/3 between the ASIS and the umbilicus and it is where the appendix lies and so people often present with pain at this point
appendicitis - aetiology
- obstruction of the lumen with faecolith (just faeces?)
- bacterial infection
- viral infection
- parasites ie worms
- obstruction due to tumour
appendicitis - pathology
*there is a huge variation - lumen may or may not be occluded
- starts with mucosal inflammation which then leads to lymphoid hyperplasia - which then causes more inflammation
- then there is obstruction of the lumen
- there will be a build up of mucus and exudate
- if it continues then venous obstruction will occur leading to ischaemia > allowing for bacterial invasion through the wall
- perforation of the appendix occurs
appendicitis - pathology concerned with surrounding features
- when there is inflammation in the abdomen it brings the greater omentum to this site
- the small bowel also adheres to the inflamed site resulting in a ‘phlegmonous mass’
- this mass can burst and all the puss contained can ooze elsewhere and cause fatal peritonitis
-fatal peritonitis due to appendicitis is normally found in the elderly, those immunocompromised, diabetic and with their omentum removed
appendicitis - symptoms
- starts with colic central abdominal pain which then shifts to the RIF
- is sore when patients cough, laugh or jump around
- loss of appetite
- vomitting not usual but can happen
- will not have opened their bowels due to ileus (lack of normal contraction in the intestines)
- patients can be quite flushed
appendicitis - signs
- mild pyrexia
- mild tachycardia
- localised RIF pain
- guarding (tensing the abdominal wall to guard inflamed organ)
- rebound (when pressure is applied at the site and pain is felt when pressure is removed suddenly)
appendicitis - special signs
- Rosving’s : pressing on the left causes pain on the right
- Psoas : patients keeps the right hip flexed as this lifts appendix off the psoas
- Obturator :
if the appendix is touching obturator internus then flexing the hip and internally rotating will cause pain - Pointing :
where did it start , where is it now ? ie central colicky pain that has shift to RIF
special cases of appendicitis
> Retrocaecal appendicitis - there may be very few signs because appendix is tucked away behind the caecum
- check for fetor oris (bad breath due to rotting substance in abdomen)
> Pelvic appendix - diarrhoea , frequency of micturition (as appendix presses on bladder)
> Postileal -
appendix can sit behind the terminal ileum causing diarrhoea and vomiting
> other : people with weird BMIs ie the obese, the elderly don’t present until very late, children and pregnant women ie is it stretching of the appendix or appendicitis
appendicitis - investigations
- very much a clinical diagnosis
- USS is useful in women and children
- AXR to exclude other causes
- bloods (WCC , CRP)
- urinalysis
what score can be used for appendicitis ?
Alvarado / MANTRELS
m - migration of pain to RIF a - anorexia (put off food) n - nausea / vomit t - tenderness in RIF r - rebound pain e - elevated temp. l - leukocytosis s - shifts of WCC rot left
each scores a single point , <5 unlikely to have appendicitis , > 7 appendicitis is likely
appendicits - management
- analgesia (paracetamol)
- antipyretics
- theatre ?
- antibiotics
- appendicectomy = laparoscopic is the best
appendicitis - management for appendix mass
-this is when patients have left it really last minute to come in ie blood and puss everywhere , quite difficult to operate on
- antibiotics are first line
- decide whether or not to operate
- theatre if antibiotics fails or it becomes complicated (tachycardic, worsening pain, increase in size, vomiting or copious NG aspirates (ileus)