Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Diagnosis: Acute Appendicitis

CT scan of the patient's abdomen and pelvis revealed a 1.2 cm dilated appendix with adjacent stranding consistent with acute appendicitis without perforation or abscess. Also noted was mild dilatation of the terminal ileum likely representing focal ileus. 

General surgery was consulted. Intravenous Cefazolin was ordered. The patient was taken to the operating room within the hour. 





Acute Appendicitis

Background
  • most common abdominal surgical emergency in the United States
  • caused by obstruction (appendecolith, foreign material, adhesions, etc) 
  • may occur as result of lymphoid hyperplasia after viral infection
  • highest incidence in ages 10 - 30 
    • Hightest misdiagnosis rate in extremes of age (infants and elderly) 
Presentation
  • pain initially vague and poorly localized in periumbilical region with nausea, anorexia and fever
  • subsequent RLQ pain over next 24 hours as peritonitis develops
  • atypical presentations:
    • RUQ pain (pregnant patients) 
    • right lower back pain (retrocecal appendix) 
    • pelvic/adnexal pain (appendix near ovary) 
    • dysuria (appendix near bladder) 
  • diagnosis commonly delayed in infants and elderly due to atypical presentation and results in perforation rates >50% in these groups
Diagnosis
  • primarily clinical 
  • leukocytosis in 80% of cases 
  • CT scan has >90% sensitivity and specificity 
  • ultrasound is not as sensitive or specificity but is imaging modality of choice for children and pregnant women 
Treatment
  • early surgical consultation
  • antibiotics 
  • surgery


References

Martinez JP, Mattu A, Palmer G, Emergency Medicine: A Focused Review of the Core Curriculum, 1st Ed, 2008, Chapter 3: Abdominal and Gastrointestinal Disorders, pages 205-206


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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Abdominal Pain and Diarrhea

An 18 year-old female presents to the emergency department with abdominal pain and diarrhea. She describes a gradual onset of sharp pain in her lower abdomen this morning that has progressively worsened with associated fever, chills, nausea and anorexia. She also reports having 3 watery bowel movements today without any blood or melena. 

A CT scan of the patient's abdomen and pelvis is shown below: 






What is the diagnosis?

Please leave a comment below and share your thoughts. 

The diagnosis for this case will be posted in approximately 1 week.