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

Appendicitis due to foreign bodies is rare. Foreign bodies leading to appendicitis or perforation are usually sharp, pointed objects. Lead shot can become lodged in the appendix. Few prior cases have shown a causal relationship between the presence of pellets in the appendix and acute appendicitis. We present the case of a 9-year-old white boy who presented to the emergency room with a 36-hour history of right lower quadrant pain over McBurney's point accompanied by anorexia. The patient's history was significant for consumption of pheasant meat 4 days before onset of symptoms. The pheasant had been shot with a shotgun. X-ray of the child's abdomen revealed a metallic foreign body in the right lower quadrant. Appendectomy was performed. Bird shot was found obstructing the lumen of the grossly inflamed appendix. Pathology was consistent with acute appendicitis. This case is presented as an interesting consequence of bird shot ingestion.
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PMID:Appendicitis due to bird shot ingestion: a case study. 1088 37

Metastases are a common feature during the evolution of breast cancer. However, gastrointestinal metastases, and especially ceco-appendicular ones, are very rare. Melanoma however frequently metastasize in the gastrointestinal tract. Ceco-appendicular metastases do not display any specific signs in cancerous patients. These rare metastases must be considered in the diagnosis of right lower quadrant pain in cancerous patients. The main differential diagnosis includes neutropenic enterocolitis, acute appendicitis, malignant intestinal obstruction and perforation of the bowel. The morbidity of gastrointestinal complications in patients with metastatic cancer receiving chemotherapy is significant and surgery is often the only chance of survival. The major clinical decision is whether or not to operate.
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PMID:Metastatic involvement of ceco-appendicular segment: a diagnosis of right lower quadrant abdominal pain in patient receiving chemotherapy. 1114 19

Clinical diagnosis of appendicitis is usually made on the basis of history, physical examination and laboratory studies. Approximately 30-45% of patients with suspected appendicitis present with atypical clinical and laboratory findings. Recently graded compression ultrasound and thin section unenhanced helical CT have been used to establish diagnosis for patients with suspected acute appendicitis. The purpose of this study was to determine the diagnostic accuracy of thin section unenhanced helical CT protocol in adult patients with suspected acute appendicitis. CT scans obtained when patients presented with right lower quadrant pain and the clinical impression was equivocal for appendicitis were evaluated. Of 296 patients referred for CT, 123 patients subsequently underwent surgery. Appendicitis had been correctly predicted in 104 of 108 patients surgically proven to have appendicitis. Unenhanced helical CT in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis had a sensitivity of 96%, specificity of 98%, positive predictive value of 97% and negative predictive value of 98%. If no definite inflammatory changes are detected, on the basis of our experience we recommend that the patient be monitored clinically, and that thin section unenhanced helical CT is the optimal technique to detect acute appendicitis in adult patients.
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PMID:Diagnostic value of unenhanced helical CT in adult patients with suspected acute appendicitis. 1220 Feb 38

Using receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) methodology, the ability to diagnose acute appendicitis with computed tomography (CT) images displayed at varying levels of lossy compression was evaluated. Nine sequential images over the ileocecal region were obtained from 53 consecutive patients with right lower quadrant pain who were clinically suspected to have acute appendicitis. Thirty were proven surgically to have acute appendicitis, alternative diagnoses confirmed in 23. The image sets were subjected to a lossy wavelet-based compression algorithm "Embedded Predictive Wavelet Image Coder" (EPWIC). Compression levels were: none, 8:1, 16:1, and 24:1, resulting in 4 sets of images per patient. Image sets were randomized and evaluated separately by 4 body radiologists on a 1,024 x 768-pixel SVGA color PC monitor in 512 x 512 format. The readers were aware of the clinical suspicion of appendicitis but were unaware of the positive fraction of cases. Individual and combined reader ROC and c2 analyses of sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were determined. For all readers, sensitivity decreases at 16:1 and 24:1 levels (P <0.01, P <0.001, respectively). Accuracy decreased at 24:1 levels (P <0.01). Specificity was unaffected. By ROC analysis there was statistically significantly decreased area under the curve at 24:1 levels (P <0.02) as compared with uncompressed images. Finite levels of lossy wavelet compression may be applied to CT images without compromising diagnostic performance.
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PMID:Computed tomography diagnosis utilizing compressed image data: an ROC analysis using acute appendicitis as a model. 1229 74

Acute appendicitis is frequently clinically suspected. However, about 50% of emergency room patients with such a diagnosis do not have acute appendicitis and between 20-25% of patients undergoing appendectomy based on clinical diagnosis have a normal appendix. On the other hand, if left untreated acute appendicitis may result in peritonitis. The purpose of this article is to review the indications for imaging patients with clinical suspicion of acute appendicitis, to describe the US and CT features of acute appendicitis, to review the advantages and limitations of US and CT, and to present the differential diagnosis to be considered in patients with right lower quadrant pain.
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PMID:[Acute appendicitis: to image or not to image?]. 1259 55

Colonic complications of severe acute pancreatitis are quite uncommon and always occur in the transverse colon and splenic flexure. Here we report the case of a 47-year-old male with mild acute pancreatitis (Ranson's score 1) who suffered from acute right lower quadrant pain during hospitalization. After conservative treatment failed, he underwent open appendectomy under the impression of acute appendicitis. However, the pathology revealed only periappendicitis. Small bowel ileus was noted on plain film of the abdomen and a high ascitic lipase level was found during operation suggesting that the periappendicitis resulted from the spreading of the pancreatic inflammatory exudate via the small bowel mesentery route. This report suggests that although rare, periappendiceal involvement mimicking acute appendicitis remains possible in even mild acute pancreatitis.
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PMID:Acute pancreatitis complicated with periappendicitis. 1263 9

Graded compression sonography is an established imaging modality in the clinical setting of acute right lower quadrant pain or to diagnose acute appendicitis because of its easy assessability, noninvasiveness, real-time imaging. However, the ability to accurately diagnose appendicitis can be affected by several factors including operator dependence, deeper-located appendix, and obesity or muscularity of the patient. However, adjuvant techniques utilizing advanced equipment and accumulated operator's experience to conventional graded compression sonography will yield more frequent detection of the vermiform appendix and more accurate results of acute appendicitis on sonography. This article introduces adjuvant techniques and various know-how of real field in the detection of the vermiform appendix and diagnosis of acute appendicitis.
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PMID:Sonography of acute appendicitis. 1274

Differential diagnosis of acute appendicitis in women of childbearing age is a challenge because of the range of gynecologic and obstetric problems with similar manifestations. We report a case of acute appendicitis with the rarely encountered complication of hemoperitoneum in a sexually active 32-year-old woman. The patient presented with right lower quadrant pain and a positive culdocentesis with non-clotting blood. Hemorrhagic corpus luteal cyst was the initial impression. Ruptured appendicitis with abscess formation and complicated hemoperitoneum was diagnosed later with the aid of abdominal computed tomographic scan, and was confirmed during operation. Hemoperitoneum may be a complication of appendicitis with abscess formation; a detailed medical history and physical examination are helpful in making the diagnosis.
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PMID:Appendicitis complicated by hemoperitoneum. 1497 71

Acute appendicitis is the most common condition presenting with right lower quadrant pain requiring acute surgical intervention in childhood. The clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis is often not straightforward and can be challenging. Approximately one-third of children with the condition have atypical clinical findings and are initially managed non-operatively. Complications usually result from perforation and include abscess formation, peritonitis, sepsis, bowel obstruction and death. Cross-sectional imaging with sonography and computed tomography (CT) have proven useful for the evaluation of suspected acute appendicitis in children. The principal advantages of sonography are its lower cost, lack of ionizing radiation, and ability to precisely delineate gynecologic disease. The principal advantages of CT are its operator independency with resultant higher diagnostic accuracy, enhanced delineation of disease extent in perforated appendicitis, and improved patient outcomes including decreased negative laparotomy and perforation rates.
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PMID:Imaging the child with right lower quadrant pain and suspected appendicitis: current concepts. 1510 75

Crohn's disease limited to the appendix is uncommon. Clinically, it is likely to mimic acute appendicitis. It is more frequent in young people and definitive diagnosis is histological. We present a series of seven cases of Crohn's disease of the appendix that were treated in our surgery service over the past 12 years. The seven patients had pain in the lower right quadrant. In all patients, the preoperative diagnosis was acute appendicitis and appendectomy was performed. Histopathological evaluation was required for diagnosis. In the postoperative course, one patient was diagnosed with colonic Crohn's disease, and outcome was favorable with medical treatment. Although isolated Crohn's disease of the appendix is a rare entity, it should be considered in the preoperative differential diagnosis of patients with right lower quadrant pain and a protracted preoperative course mimicking acute appendicitis. Disease recurrence elsewhere in the alimentary tract is uncommon.
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PMID:[Crohn's disease of the appendix]. 1642 Aug 53


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