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Query: UMLS:C0085693 (acute appendicitis)
3,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirty-four pregnant women with acute appendicitis presented at Parkland Memorial Hospital during a 15-year period. Abdominal pain, usually accompanied by nausea with or without vomiting, was the most common presenting symptom. Anorexia was less constant, and its occurrence decreased with advancing gestation. Physical findings usually included direct abdominal tenderness and, less often, rebound tenderness. Leukocytosis and/or a "left shift" were common laboratory findings, and the urinalysis was normal in most cases. Diagnosis was increasingly difficult as gestation progressed. This was reflected both by the increasing severity of the disease process found at surgery and by increasing fetal loss. If the diagnosis of appendicitis is suspected in the gravid patient, immediate surgical intervention is indicated to prevent the catastrophic complications associated with procrastination in diagnosis and treatment.
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PMID:Appendicitis complicating pregnancy. 112 71

Acute hydrops of the gallbladder (AHGB) is a rare paediatric disease being diagnosed with increased frequency due to its association with other illnesses and the availability of ultrasonography. The symptoms and signs of AHGB include abdominal pain, vomiting, abdominal mass and/or tenderness. As these clinical features mimic the more common surgical conditions such as acute appendicitis, intussusception and volvulus, some cases are still diagnosed only at laparotomy. Diagnosis is established by ultrasonography of the abdomen demonstrating normal biliary ducts and a distended gallbladder without calculi or congenital malformation. The aetiology of acute hydrops of the gallbladder is unknown but may be multifactorial. Treatment varies from non-operative management to surgical intervention.
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PMID:Acute hydrops of the gallbladder in childhood. 139 81

Amongst 876 cases suffering from ascariasis 662 cases were managed conservatively and 214 cases were treated by surgery. Surgical complications were found to be more common in males in the age group of 6-10 years. Principal clinical features included pain abdomen (99.54%), constipation (80.25%), vomiting (67.46%), abdominal distension (47.03%), palpable worm masses in abdomen (35.50%), visible peristalsis (27.63%), worms in vomitus (24.20%) and palpable worm clumps on rectal examination (20.09%). Principal clinical diagnosis were worm colics (48.74%), sub-acute intestinal obstruction (27.74%), acute intestinal obstruction (11.42%) and acute intestinal obstruction with strangulation (5.71%); rest of the cases included worm cholecystitis (2.63%), obstructive jaundice (1.71%), bile peritonitis (0.91%), intestinal perforation (0.68%) and acute appendicitis (0.46%). Surgical procedures performed were milking of worms (34.12%), resection anastomosis of small intestine (23.36%), enterotomy with removal of worms (16.36%), cholecystectomy with T-tube drainage (12.15%), cholecystectomy (8.41%), appendectomy (1.87%), resection anastomosis with excision of Meckel's diverticulum (1.40%), repair of intestinal perforation with peritoneal toilet (1.40%) and cholecystectomy with choledochoduodenostomy (0.93%). In surgically managed patients 35 cases died of septicaemia and in conservatively managed cases 3 died of encephalitis with an overall mortality of 4.34%.
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PMID:Surgical manifestations and management of ascariasis in Kashmir. 140 71

This article discusses the findings of a study of pre-adolescent children to determine if the mode of presentation of appendicitis had changed over the past 10 years, if the incidence of perforations decreased with age, and if diagnosis related groups (DRGs) impacted the length of hospital stay. The charts of 42 children under the age of 12 years who were discharged from two inner-city hospitals with a diagnosis of acute appendicitis from 1980 to 1989 were reviewed. There were 20 blacks and 22 whites, 26 males and 16 females with an average age of 7.31 years (range: 2 to 11 years). Over 95% of patients presented with right lower quadrant pain, 78% with guarding, 80% with a positive psoas sign, 93% with a positive Rovsing's sign, and 65% with rectal tenderness. Over 85% of patients had a history of nausea, vomiting, and anorexia. The mean duration of pain was 52.8 hours and the mean temperature was 99.6 degrees F. The mean white blood cell count was 18,176 +/- 4682 for whites versus 14,615 +/- 5459 for blacks. At surgery 15/42 (36%) of patients had a perforation, 11 of whom had positive wound cultures. Escherichia coli was recovered in all 11 of these patients. The average duration of pain in the perforated group was 50.9 hours, and the average age was 7 years. Eleven of these patients had normal bowel sounds on admission. Only 31% of the total cohort had a fecalith identified by pathology. The average postoperative length of stay was 6.5 +/- 2.5 days before the initiation of DRGs and 7.5 +/- 3 days afterward.
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PMID:Appendicitis in children: a continuing clinical challenge. 140 59

In a controlled, prospective study the following five criteria were used for the diagnosis and management of acute appendicitis: abdominal pain; vomiting; right lower quadrant tenderness; low grade fever (< or = 38.8 degrees C); and polymorphonuclear leucocytosis (TC > or = 10,000 with polymorphs > or = 75%). The aim of the study was to reduce the negative appendicectomy rate. If four out of five or five out of five criteria were present on admission, appendicectomy was carried out. On the other hand, if three out of five criteria were present on admission, the patient was subjected to active inpatient observation until either the development of the fourth criterion, when appendicectomy was performed, or until the patient recovered and the condition did not progress beyond the third criterion. Generalised peritonitis due to a perforated appendix was excluded from the study. Over a 1-year period, 58 patients (M:F = 45:13) were entered into the study. Appendicectomy was carried out in 46 (80%) of patients; of these, 32 patients (70%) were operated on soon after admission. The remaining 14 (30%) were operated on after a period of inpatient observation decided the development of the fourth criterion. A total of 12 patients (12/58 = 20%) did not undergo operation. The control group consisted of 59 patients upon whom appendicectomy was carried out by another surgical unit over the same 1-year period. The negative appendicectomy rate in the trial group was 6.5% (3/46), whereas in the control group it was 17% (10/59) (P < 0.05). We conclude that the use of a simple scoring system can significantly reduce the negative appendicectomy rate.
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PMID:A simple scoring system to reduce the negative appendicectomy rate. 141 84

Primary pneumococcal peritonitis is an uncommon condition 1st identified in 1885. It occurs when peritoneal inflammation is present in the absence of an intraabdominal source of infection. In the preantibiotic era, the condition accounted for 2% of childhood abdominal emergencies largely among girls aged 2-10 years. Mortality was 42-100%, with death sometimes occurring within 48 hours of the onset of symptoms. This condition now present in female adults, is associated with IUD use, and is comparatively common in India. Consideration should therefore be given to the existence of primary pneumococcal peritonitis when diagnosing and managing abdominal emergencies. The pneumococcus may enter the peritoneal cavity via the female genital tract, blood, or through transmural spread from the gastrointestinal tract. No evidence supports a relationship between type of IUD and/or length of time in place, and the onset of peritonitis. Given pneumococcus' commensal existence in the upper respiratory tract, urogenital sex may facilitate its entrance to the peritoneal cavity through the female genital tract. Abdominal pain, diarrhea, and vomiting generally present, while the patient may also be pyrexial and dehydrated. In diagnosing this condition, the practitioner may confuse it with acute appendicitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, or gastroenteritis if in the early stages of peritonitis. Diagnosis is often confirmed only thorough laparotomy, but abdominal paracentesis and/or abdominal ultrasound may also be employed as diagnostic aids. Laparotomy and a regime of antibiotics is the preferred treatment. 2 case studies are discussed.
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PMID:Primary pneumococcal peritonitis. 159 42

In this series, nine pregnant patients had appendectomy. Seven patients had acute appendicitis; pyuria and symptoms suggesting urinary tract infection delayed diagnosis in one whose appendix perforated. Abdominal pain and nausea with or without vomiting were presenting symptoms in all of the patients. Tenderness in the right lower quadrant was present in six. Eight patients, including two with a normal appendix, had leukocytosis with a left shift. There was no fetal or maternal loss. In addition, I reviewed more than 900 other cases of appendectomy during pregnancy, as reported in the literature since 1960. Among 713 previously reported cases of confirmed appendicitis, rupture had occurred in 25%. There were five maternal deaths, all in the group of patients with perforation. Perinatal mortality was 4.8% among patients with acute inflammation only and 19.4% in those with perforative appendicitis. The diagnosis rests on clinical acumen, and prompt surgical intervention is the key to good outcome.
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PMID:Appendicitis complicating pregnancy. 173 28

Between 1982 and 1989, 78 children with diarrhoea-associated haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS) were referred to this hospital. Most presented with abdominal pain, bloody diarrhoea and vomiting. Seven had severe gastrointestinal involvement, four of whom required resection for bowel perforation or necrosis. One also developed an oesophageal stricture, a previously unreported complication of HUS. These seven children had a high incidence of other complications including hypertension, and cerebral and pancreatic involvement. One died from severe cerebral involvement, one has a residual neurological deficit and one has residual renal impairment. Severe gastrointestinal involvement did not significantly affect the long-term outcome. Simple haematological indices helped predict severe gut involvement. Four of the 78 children had undergone appendicectomy before the diagnosis of HUS was made. The operative findings were in no case typical of primary acute appendicitis, although histological examination did confirm inflammation of the appendix in two patients. Diagnosis is difficult in early disease, but increased awareness may help prevent unnecessary appendicectomy.
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PMID:Oesophageal and severe gut involvement in the haemolytic uraemic syndrome. 177 28

Seventeen girls were treated following the diagnosis of ovarian cysts. Four patients were operated on within the first 6 months of age and the other 13 patients were 10-15 years old at the time of diagnosis. Antenatal diagnosis was made in 3 cases. The presenting symptoms in the infants were distended abdomen in 3 cases, abdominal pain in 1 and vomiting in 1. In the older children the presenting symptoms were abdominal pain in 12, vomiting in 5 and elevated temperature in 6. Preoperative ultrasound was performed in 5 patients, 3 neonates and 2 older children. Sixteen of the 17 girls were operated on. The indication for surgery was an ovarian cyst with complication in the infants and in the older children the suspicion of acute appendicitis. The operative procedure was cyst uncapping in 7 cases, salpingo-oophorectomy in 4, ovarian resection in 2, ovarian fixation only in 1 and no ovarian intervention in 2. Asymptomatic infants with an ovarian cyst less than 4 cm in diameter can be managed conservatively. Surgery can be recommended after documented change of the cyst on ultrasound, large cysts giving rise to symptoms or presentation of an acute abdomen. Salvage of variable ovarian tissue is desirable.
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PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of ovarian cysts in children. 188 16

The retrospective analysis comprised 986 of 1050 patients operated on for acute appendicitis in the period 1983-1987. Appendicitis was most common in the age group from 11 to 20 years. The perforation frequency was 12.4%. Seventy four percent of patients came to the first medical examination with already perforated appendix. The necessary period of observation is the first 12 hours after onset of troubles. Probable presence of phlegmonous appendicitis is small if 48 hours have passed after initiation of troubles. The frequency of the studied symptoms (nausea, vomiting, temperature, leukocytosis) ranged from 49.4% to 64.8%. The most common postoperative complication is wound infection. The overall mortality rate was 0.1%.
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PMID:[Age distribution and clinical characteristics in acute appendicitis]. 189 69


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