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

Twelve children with acute abdominal pain, which was suspected of being acute appendicitis, were subsequently found to have lower lobe pneumonia. Diagnostic barium enema or operative exploration failed to demonstrate any appendiceal abnormality. The abdominal symptoms and the ileus subsided soon after the initiation of antibiotic therapy. Contrary to common belief, it was observed that left-sided pneumonia is capable of mimicking appendicitis almost as frequently as right-sided pneumonia. Since the likelihood of acute appendicitis accompanying pneumonia is small, operative intervention is rarely indicated and should be undertaken only after careful and intensive investigation.
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PMID:Basilar pneumonia simulating acute appendicitis in children. 126 2

The accurate clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis is difficult, and many techniques have been suggested to improve diagnostic accuracy such as laparoscopy, ultrasonography and barium enema examination. In this study serial total leucocyte counts and serial C-reactive protein (CRP) concentrations in acute appendicitis were measured. The sensitivity and specificity of serial leucocyte counts in acute appendicitis were 92 and 100 per cent, and for CRP concentrations 69 and 75 per cent, respectively. The sensitivity and specificity of serial total leucocyte counts fulfilled the criteria for a diagnostic test. It is suggested that in patients with equivocal clinical findings, clinical observation combined with serial leucocyte counts may improve decision making.
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PMID:Role of sequential leucocyte counts and C-reactive protein measurements in acute appendicitis. 851 16

The diagnosis of acute appendicitis can be difficult. Barium enemas, computed tomography (CT) scans, ultrasound examinations and Indium scans are used to aid in making the diagnosis with varying degrees of success. This blinded, prospective study reports the use of a Technetium 99-m Hexamethylpropyleneamineoxide (HMPAO) labelled white blood cell scan in 30 patients with suspected appendicitis. Autologous white blood counts from 25 cc of whole blood labelled with Tc-99 HMPAO were reinjected into patients. Abdominal imaging was performed at a half hour postinjection and repeated at 2 to 4 hours postinjection. A positive study showed an increased isotope uptake in the right lower quadrant. Nineteen patients had histologically proven appendicitis. Three of these patients were excluded because they were operated on before scan completion. Thirteen of the remaining 16 patients with appendicitis had positive studies (false negative rate = 19%). All patients without appendicitis had either negative scans or scans that detected other intra-abdominal diseases, such as diverticulitis, tubo-ovarian abscess, or small bowel infarction (false positive rate = 0%). Overall, this Tc-99 HMPAO study had a sensitivity of 81 per cent, a specificity of 100 per cent and an overall accuracy of 89 per cent. The 4-hour Tc-99 HMPAO WBC scan is a useful, noninvasive test for confirming the clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis, but it may prove more valuable as a diagnostic study to rule out appendicitis in patients that have abdominal pain of unclear etiology.
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PMID:Detection of acute appendicitis by technetium 99 HMPAO scanning. 145 3

Inflammation of the appendix is a common cause of acute abdominal pain. The etiology and pathophysiology of appendicitis have been well described. The initiating factor often is obstruction of the appendiceal lumen by inspissated stool, barium, food, parasites, or hyperplastic lymphoid tissue. Two patients have been identified who developed appendicitis temporally related to blunt abdominal trauma, without other clear etiology. Although absolute documentation of trauma as an etiologic factor in these cases is difficult, theoretical mechanisms for the occurrence are discussed. In the setting of right lower quadrant pain following mild to moderate blunt abdominal trauma, acute appendicitis should be considered as a possibility.
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PMID:Acute appendicitis following blunt abdominal trauma. Incidence or coincidence? 163 93

One hundred patients with suspected acute abdominal inflammation were imaged at 0.5, 2-3, 4-6, and 24 hours after the administration of Tc-99m HMPAO labeled autologous leukocytes. Scan findings were retrospectively compared with final diagnosis, serum C-reactive protein (CRP), and antibiotic treatment. Clinical findings were confirmed with surgery, barium enema, or sigmoidoscopy in 61 patients, and diagnosis was based only on clinical findings in 13 patients. In 26 patients, symptoms subsided before a final diagnosis was made. Tc-99m leukocyte images were positive in 45 of the 61 patients with a confirmed diagnosis, including all patients with acute cholecystitis (N = 4) and inflammatory bowel disease (N = 8). They were also positive in nineteen out of 25 patients who had acute colonic diverticulitis and in 6 out of 7 who had intra-abdominal abscesses. Abnormal activity was found in patients with colonic carcinoma, small bowel infarction, and acute appendicitis. Abnormal activity was visualized in 0.5-hour images in all but one of the positive cases. With the exception of two postoperative cases, malignant lymphoma, and a liver abscess, a CRP level of greater than 75 mg/L was associated with positive image findings. Antibiotic treatment did not affect imaging findings. Imaging with Tc-99m labeled leukocytes appears to be valuable for detecting and localizing abdominal inflammation, and three-phase imaging during the first 4-6 hours is recommended. In some cases, 24-hour images may be useful for distinguishing small bowel from large bowel inflammation.
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PMID:Tc-99m labeled leukocytes in imaging of patients with suspected acute abdominal inflammation. 220 80

Acute appendicitis is still a difficult diagnosis to make. Reports place the rate of incorrect diagnosis--the rate of negative laparotomy--at 15 to 42 per cent. This study is a prospective analysis of barium enema (BE) examinations performed upon 101 patients who presented with a history accompanied by signs and symptoms suggestive of, but not clearly diagnostic of, acute appendicitis. The over-all accuracy rate was 91.5 per cent. Sensitivity and specificity rates were 83 and 96 per cent, respectively. BE had a positive predictive value of 88 per cent and a negative predictive value of 95 per cent in this study. No complications resulted from the use of BE in this study, which included three instances of perforated appendicitis. We conclude that emergent BE is an inexpensive, safe and readily available adjunct to the diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Its use in the presence of a clear-cut presentation of acute appendicitis is not necessary. When clinical data were equivocal, BE reduced the rate of negative laparotomy to 7.2 per cent.
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PMID:Barium enema in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis. 236 Jan 47

Methods used to improve the accuracy of diagnosis of acute appendicitis are reviewed. Laparoscopy, barium enema, ultrasonography and computer assistance have all been shown to improve accuracy, but no one method is of proven superiority. Such diagnostic aids or intensive in-hospital observation must be used to reduce the 15-30 per cent negative laparotomy rate when acute appendicitis is suspected, without increasing the incidence of appendiceal perforation.
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PMID:Aids in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis. 269 Oct 16

533 consecutive patients with suspected acute appendicitis or appendiceal mass were examined by ultrasonography to distinguish acute appendicitis from bacterial enteritis. In 61 (11.4%) ultrasonography revealed the characteristic picture associated with bacterial enteritis of the ileocaecal region--enlarged mesenteric lymph nodes and mural thickening of the terminal ileum and caecum--but no image of the appendix. In 41 of these a bacterial infection was confirmed: infection due to Yersinia enterocolitica in 21, Campylobacter jejuni in 15, Salmonella B in 3, Salmonella C in 1, and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis in 1. In the other 20 bacteriological tests were negative (10) or not done (10). Oral barium studies, done in 15 patients, showed thickening of the terminal ileum in all of them. Only 22 of the 61 patients had diarrhoea. Yersinia enteritis clinically simulated an appendiceal mass in 17 of 22 patients, 6 of the 61 patients underwent surgery, and in all of them the appendix removed was normal. The other 55 patients recovered with conservative treatment. In 26 a planned appendicectomy was cancelled because of the sonographic findings. Bacterial enteritis limited to the ileocaecal region (bacterial ileocaecitis) seems to be responsible for an appreciable number of unnecessary appendicetomies. It has characteristic sonographic features that distinguish it from appendicitis.
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PMID:Incidence and sonographic diagnosis of bacterial ileocaecitis masquerading as appendicitis. 197 35

Acute appendicitis is usually diagnosed solely on clinical grounds. This results in a 15-30% incidence of unnecessary laparotomies and contributes to a perforation rate of 20-35%. The accuracies of eleven diagnostic aids for appendicitis are reviewed. The white blood cell count and straight x-ray of the abdomen are very unreliable. Four other methods, viz leucocyte scintigraphy, peritoneal lavage, barium swallow and scoring systems have not yet been sufficiently investigated. CT scanning may be useful in difficult cases. Four methods have a proven value and are recommended: Ultrasound scanning, computer assessment, laparoscopy and barium enema. Each of the latter are better than clinical assessment alone and can reduce both negative laparotomy rates and the incidence of appendicular perforation. Unaided clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis is no longer acceptable.
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PMID:[Diagnostic aids in acute appendicitis]. 267 95

The records of 166 patients with appendicitis were analyzed by sex for time from presentation in the emergency department to surgery. Additionally, the effects of barium enema examinations on these times were noted. Our findings indicate that there was no significant delay in surgery based on gender (P = .42). However, those patients who had barium enema as part of their workup had significantly longer delays from presentation to surgery (P = .00005). These results support the notion that the most appropriate treatment for acute appendicitis is early diagnosis, a short preoperative resuscitation, and early surgical intervention. Barium enema is indicated only when the diagnosis is highly suspect and only if it can be carried out in a timely manner.
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PMID:The influence of gender and use of barium enema on morbidity in acute appendicitis. 271 84


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