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Query: UMLS:C0003615 (
appendicitis
)
4,439
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Laparoscopic procedures have changed the indications for appendectomy. Routine exeresis should not be performed if a normal organ is observed during an exploratory procedure, but should be in cases with clinical manifestations of right flank pain since neurogenic
appendicitis
is not rare. We report a recent case observed in a 76-year-old woman. The patient was initially hospitalized for right flank pain with nausea and irregular episodes of diarrhoea. Clinical examination and complementary exploration led to cholecystectomy via subcostal access. On per-operative cholangiography the common bile duct appeared normal. Immediate follow-up was uneventful and the patient was discharged. Twelve days later, the patient complained of the same type of abdominal pain and was hospitalized with a fever at 38 degrees C and shivers. The right flank was very painful at palpation. Echography and computed tomography eliminated a subphrenic abscess or secondary pancreatitis.
Pain localized
at MacBurney's point 8 days later. Barium study showed a normal colon with the exception of uncomplicated diverticulosis. Subjective pain persisted and appendectomy was decided. Pathological examination revealed neurogenic
appendicitis
. First described in 1924, neurogenic
appendicitis
is relatively frequent. Macroscopically, a sclerous fibromyxomatous nodule obliterates the lumen. Microscopically, the central obliterating lesion is composed of hyperplastic nervous tissue in a fibromyxoid matrix, particularly important at the point of the appendix. Clinically neurogenic
appendicitis
is usually chronic and the appendix appears healthy in situ. Cure is always achieved with resection. Laparoscopic procedures can identify para-appendicular causes of painful abdominal syndromes and sclero-atrophic
appendicitis
, but in the absence of another explanation exeresis appears to be justified due to the possibility of neurogenic
appendicitis
.
...
PMID:[Neurogenic appendicitis. A case]. 793 31