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Home | Viva | Operative Surgery | General Surgery

Appendicitis / Appendicectomy

Appendicitis

Inflammation of the vermiform appendix
Most cases are idiopathic.

  1. Lumen: mucosal appendicitis
    • Foreign material
    • Faeces
    • Worms: strongyloides, ascaris lumbricoides
    • Parasites: oesophagostomiasis
  2. Wall: transmural appendicitis
    • Infection: Viral (CMV, adenovirus), bacterial (TB, yersinia), amoebae, schistosomes
    • Inflammation: UC, crohn's, pseudomembranous colitis
    • Ischaemia: ischaemic colitis, congenital stricture, iatrogeni
  3. Outside wall: Serosal appendicitis
    • Ovaries - salpingitis/oophritis
    • Endometriosis
    • Diverticular disease

 

Presentation

  1. Clinical findings
    • Periumbilical colicky pain (visceral peritoeneum)
    • Migrates to RIF (parietal peritoneum)
  2. Specific features
    • McBurney's point pain
    • Rosving's sign: Deep palpation of RIF causes pain in RIF - confused visceral peritoneum (also positive in bladder, uterus, descending colon, fallopian tubes, ovaries inflammation)
    • Psoas sign: flexed right hip where appendix is lying over psoas muscle
    • Rectal tenderness: from pelvic appendix

 

 

Indications

  • Emergency - acute appendicitis
  • Elective - "interval" appendiciectomy after intial conservative treatment (of appendix mass)

Open Procedure

  1. GA + Antibiotics + supine position
  2. Access appendix
    • McBurney's incision (90' to imarginary line) / Lanz incision (cosmetically better) / High up in RUQ in children
    • Skin, fat (campers fascia), scarpa's fascia
    • Incise external oblique aponeurosis in line of fibres, expose internal oblique (if too medial will see rectus sheath)
    • Split internal oblique fibres transversely, enlarge defect
    • Pick up peritoneum between 2 clips, incise with scalpel - turbid fluid indicates appendicitis (send this off to microbiology)
    • Identify caecum (has teniae) and deliver into wound [enlarge incision if difficult/impossible to deliver]
  3. Remove appendix
    • Hold appendix with 2 tissue forceps (Babcocks)
    • Divide mesoappendix (hold up to light to see blood vessels)
    • Apply purse string (buries appendix stump) with 2/O
    • Crush appendix base (facilitates secure knot tying) and ligate proximally with O suture.
    • Remove appendix, bury stump by tightening purse string
    • Suck out free fluid, wash out peritoneal cavity
  4. Close wound in layers

 

Laproscopic Appendicectomy

Especially young female patients - where diagnosis uncertain, imaging has failed to exclude gynaecological cause.

 

  1. GA / Possible conversion to open
  2. Establish pneumoperitoneum 
    • Trendelburg position
    • Infraumbilical incision
    • Open peritoneum under direct vision
    • Insert trochar
    • Insufflate gas
  3. Inspect appendix
    • 5mm port RIF under direct vision
    • 5mm port LIF
    • Grasp caecum and move towards spleen
    • Aspirate free fluid (send for cytology)
  4. Remove appendix
    • Grasp appendix with forceps
    • Dissect from mesentry using hook diathermy introduced through right port
    • Ligate at base using pre-tied Vicryl ligature + second distal to first one
    • Divide and remove under direct vision
  5. Peritoneal lavage
  6. Close fascial defects with absorbable sutures + steri-strips to skin

 

If appendix normal - look for other causes:

  • Gynae: ovaries, fallopian tubes, ectopic pregnancy
  • Gut: meckel's, sigmoid diverticulitis
  • Paediatric: look for mesenteric adenitis

Insert drain if abscess present

 

Complications

  • Increased risk of right hernia
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