Diferencia entre revisiones de «Appendicitis»
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*'''Most common surgical emergency''' worldwide | |||
*Lifetime risk: ~7-8% (peak incidence ages 10-30) | |||
*Most common | *Pathophysiology: luminal obstruction (fecalith, lymphoid hyperplasia, rarely tumor) → bacterial overgrowth → wall inflammation → ischemia → perforation | ||
* | *Perforation risk increases with time: ~2% at 24 hours, increasing to ~50% by 72 hours | ||
*Atypical presentations common in: children, elderly, pregnant women, immunocompromised | |||
* | |||
* | |||
==Clinical Features== | ==Clinical Features== | ||
===Classic Presentation=== | |||
=== | *Periumbilical pain migrating to RLQ over 12-24 hours (migration is most specific historical feature) | ||
* | *Anorexia (nearly universal; absence should raise doubt) | ||
*Nausea, vomiting (usually after onset of pain) | |||
*Low-grade [[fever]] (high fever suggests perforation/abscess) | |||
* | |||
* | |||
*[[ | |||
===Physical Exam=== | ===Physical Exam=== | ||
*McBurney | *McBurney point tenderness (1/3 distance from ASIS to umbilicus) | ||
*Rovsing sign | *Rovsing sign: RLQ pain with LLQ palpation | ||
*Psoas sign | *Psoas sign: RLQ pain with right hip extension (retrocecal appendix) | ||
*Obturator sign | *Obturator sign: RLQ pain with internal rotation of flexed right hip (pelvic appendix) | ||
* | *Rebound tenderness and guarding (peritoneal irritation) | ||
* | *Dunphy sign: increased pain with coughing | ||
=== | ===Atypical Presentations=== | ||
*Retrocecal appendix (~30%): flank or back pain, positive psoas sign, less peritoneal irritation | |||
*Pelvic appendix: suprapubic pain, urinary symptoms, diarrhea | |||
*Pregnant women: RUQ pain (displaced appendix); less peritoneal signs; higher perforation rate<ref>Mourad J, et al. Appendicitis in pregnancy: new information that contradicts long-held clinical beliefs. ''Am J Obstet Gynecol''. 2000;182(5):1027-1029. PMID 10819817</ref> | |||
*Elderly: delayed presentation, less fever, higher perforation rate (~50%) | |||
*Children <5: nonspecific symptoms; perforation common by presentation | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{ | *[[Mesenteric adenitis]] (children — viral) | ||
*[[Ovarian torsion]], ruptured [[ovarian cyst]], [[ectopic pregnancy]] | |||
*[[Crohn's disease]] (terminal ileitis) | |||
*[[Diverticulitis]] (right-sided in Asian patients, cecal) | |||
*[[Cholecystitis]], [[nephrolithiasis]], [[UTI]] | |||
*[[Pelvic inflammatory disease]] | |||
*Epiploic appendagitis, omental infarction | |||
*[[Testicular torsion]] | |||
{{RLQ pain DDX}} | |||
==Evaluation== | ==Evaluation== | ||
===Labs=== | ===Labs=== | ||
* | *WBC: elevated in ~80% (but normal WBC does NOT exclude appendicitis) | ||
* | *CRP: elevated; combined normal WBC + normal CRP has high NPV | ||
* | *Urinalysis: mild pyuria/hematuria may occur (inflammation adjacent to ureter) — does not exclude appendicitis | ||
* | *Pregnancy test in all reproductive-age women | ||
* | *Lipase if epigastric component | ||
* | ===Clinical Decision Rules=== | ||
* | *Alvarado Score (MANTRELS): Migration, Anorexia, Nausea, Tenderness RLQ, Rebound, Elevation of temp, Leukocytosis, Shift to left | ||
* | **Score ≤3: low risk; 4-6: moderate; ≥7: high probability | ||
*AIR Score (Appendicitis Inflammatory Response): incorporates CRP | |||
*'''These scores help risk-stratify but do NOT replace clinical judgment''' | |||
* | |||
* | |||
===Imaging=== | ===Imaging=== | ||
* | ====CT Abdomen/Pelvis with IV Contrast (Test of Choice in Adults)==== | ||
* | *Sensitivity 94-98%, specificity 95% | ||
* | *Findings: enlarged appendix > 6 mm diameter, periappendiceal fat stranding, appendicolith, wall enhancement | ||
* | *Signs of perforation: abscess, extraluminal air, phlegmon | ||
*Oral contrast generally NOT needed | |||
====Ultrasound (First-line in Pediatrics and Pregnancy)==== | |||
*Sensitivity 86%, specificity 81% (operator dependent) | |||
* | *Findings: non-compressible appendix > 6 mm, target sign, periappendiceal fluid | ||
*If US equivocal in pediatrics: MRI preferred over CT to avoid radiation | |||
* | |||
====MRI (Alternative in Pregnancy)==== | |||
*Sensitivity 94%, specificity 97% | |||
*Preferred over CT in pregnancy (no radiation) | |||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
=== | ===Uncomplicated Appendicitis=== | ||
*'''NPO, IV fluids, pain control''' (analgesics do NOT mask peritoneal signs) | |||
*Pre-operative antibiotics: cefoxitin 2g IV or ceftriaxone + metronidazole | |||
*Laparoscopic appendectomy (standard of care) | |||
*Antibiotics-first approach: emerging evidence supports nonoperative management with antibiotics alone for selected uncomplicated appendicitis (CODA trial)<ref>CODA Collaborative. A randomized trial comparing antibiotics with appendectomy for appendicitis. ''N Engl J Med''. 2020;383(20):1907-1919. PMID 33017106</ref> | |||
**~30% failure/recurrence rate at 1 year | |||
**Shared decision-making with patient and surgeon | |||
=== | ===Complicated Appendicitis (Perforated/Abscess)=== | ||
* | *Broad-spectrum antibiotics: piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375-4.5g IV OR ceftriaxone + metronidazole | ||
* | *Small phlegmon/abscess (<3 cm): antibiotics + interval appendectomy in 6-8 weeks | ||
* | *Large abscess (>3 cm): CT-guided percutaneous drainage + antibiotics + interval appendectomy | ||
*Peritonitis/sepsis: emergent appendectomy | |||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
* | *Surgical consultation for all confirmed or highly suspected appendicitis | ||
*Admit for surgical management | |||
*If appendicitis suspected but imaging equivocal: observation with serial exams or repeat imaging in 6-12 hours | |||
*Discharge with close follow-up only if alternative diagnosis confirmed and appendicitis reliably excluded | |||
* | |||
* | |||
=== | == Calculators == | ||
{{Alvarado Calculator}} | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[ | *[[Abdominal pain]] | ||
*[[Appendicitis (peds)]] | |||
*[[Abdominal pain (peds)]] | |||
*[ | *[[Surgical abdomen]] | ||
*[ | |||
*[ | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
*Di Saverio S, et al. Diagnosis and treatment of acute appendicitis: 2020 update of the WSES Jerusalem guidelines. ''World J Emerg Surg''. 2020;15:27. PMID 32295644 | |||
*Bhangu A, et al. Acute appendicitis: modern understanding of pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management. ''Lancet''. 2015;386(10000):1278-1287. PMID 26460662 | |||
*Alvarado A. A practical score for the early diagnosis of acute appendicitis. ''Ann Emerg Med''. 1986;15(5):557-564. PMID 3963537 | |||
[[Category:GI]] | [[Category:GI]] | ||
[[Category:Surgery]] | [[Category:Surgery]] | ||
Revisión actual - 09:55 22 mar 2026
Background
- Most common surgical emergency worldwide
- Lifetime risk: ~7-8% (peak incidence ages 10-30)
- Pathophysiology: luminal obstruction (fecalith, lymphoid hyperplasia, rarely tumor) → bacterial overgrowth → wall inflammation → ischemia → perforation
- Perforation risk increases with time: ~2% at 24 hours, increasing to ~50% by 72 hours
- Atypical presentations common in: children, elderly, pregnant women, immunocompromised
Clinical Features
Classic Presentation
- Periumbilical pain migrating to RLQ over 12-24 hours (migration is most specific historical feature)
- Anorexia (nearly universal; absence should raise doubt)
- Nausea, vomiting (usually after onset of pain)
- Low-grade fever (high fever suggests perforation/abscess)
Physical Exam
- McBurney point tenderness (1/3 distance from ASIS to umbilicus)
- Rovsing sign: RLQ pain with LLQ palpation
- Psoas sign: RLQ pain with right hip extension (retrocecal appendix)
- Obturator sign: RLQ pain with internal rotation of flexed right hip (pelvic appendix)
- Rebound tenderness and guarding (peritoneal irritation)
- Dunphy sign: increased pain with coughing
Atypical Presentations
- Retrocecal appendix (~30%): flank or back pain, positive psoas sign, less peritoneal irritation
- Pelvic appendix: suprapubic pain, urinary symptoms, diarrhea
- Pregnant women: RUQ pain (displaced appendix); less peritoneal signs; higher perforation rate[1]
- Elderly: delayed presentation, less fever, higher perforation rate (~50%)
- Children <5: nonspecific symptoms; perforation common by presentation
Differential Diagnosis
- Mesenteric adenitis (children — viral)
- Ovarian torsion, ruptured ovarian cyst, ectopic pregnancy
- Crohn's disease (terminal ileitis)
- Diverticulitis (right-sided in Asian patients, cecal)
- Cholecystitis, nephrolithiasis, UTI
- Pelvic inflammatory disease
- Epiploic appendagitis, omental infarction
- Testicular torsion
Evaluation
Labs
- WBC: elevated in ~80% (but normal WBC does NOT exclude appendicitis)
- CRP: elevated; combined normal WBC + normal CRP has high NPV
- Urinalysis: mild pyuria/hematuria may occur (inflammation adjacent to ureter) — does not exclude appendicitis
- Pregnancy test in all reproductive-age women
- Lipase if epigastric component
Clinical Decision Rules
- Alvarado Score (MANTRELS): Migration, Anorexia, Nausea, Tenderness RLQ, Rebound, Elevation of temp, Leukocytosis, Shift to left
- Score ≤3: low risk; 4-6: moderate; ≥7: high probability
- AIR Score (Appendicitis Inflammatory Response): incorporates CRP
- These scores help risk-stratify but do NOT replace clinical judgment
Imaging
CT Abdomen/Pelvis with IV Contrast (Test of Choice in Adults)
- Sensitivity 94-98%, specificity 95%
- Findings: enlarged appendix > 6 mm diameter, periappendiceal fat stranding, appendicolith, wall enhancement
- Signs of perforation: abscess, extraluminal air, phlegmon
- Oral contrast generally NOT needed
Ultrasound (First-line in Pediatrics and Pregnancy)
- Sensitivity 86%, specificity 81% (operator dependent)
- Findings: non-compressible appendix > 6 mm, target sign, periappendiceal fluid
- If US equivocal in pediatrics: MRI preferred over CT to avoid radiation
MRI (Alternative in Pregnancy)
- Sensitivity 94%, specificity 97%
- Preferred over CT in pregnancy (no radiation)
Management
Uncomplicated Appendicitis
- NPO, IV fluids, pain control (analgesics do NOT mask peritoneal signs)
- Pre-operative antibiotics: cefoxitin 2g IV or ceftriaxone + metronidazole
- Laparoscopic appendectomy (standard of care)
- Antibiotics-first approach: emerging evidence supports nonoperative management with antibiotics alone for selected uncomplicated appendicitis (CODA trial)[2]
- ~30% failure/recurrence rate at 1 year
- Shared decision-making with patient and surgeon
Complicated Appendicitis (Perforated/Abscess)
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics: piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375-4.5g IV OR ceftriaxone + metronidazole
- Small phlegmon/abscess (<3 cm): antibiotics + interval appendectomy in 6-8 weeks
- Large abscess (>3 cm): CT-guided percutaneous drainage + antibiotics + interval appendectomy
- Peritonitis/sepsis: emergent appendectomy
Disposition
- Surgical consultation for all confirmed or highly suspected appendicitis
- Admit for surgical management
- If appendicitis suspected but imaging equivocal: observation with serial exams or repeat imaging in 6-12 hours
- Discharge with close follow-up only if alternative diagnosis confirmed and appendicitis reliably excluded
Calculators
Alvarado Score
| Criteria | Points | No | Yes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Symptoms | |||
| Migration of pain to RLQ | +1 | 1 | |
| Anorexia | +1 | 1 | |
| Nausea/vomiting | +1 | ||
| Signs | |||
| Tenderness in RLQ | +2 | 1 | |
| Rebound pain | +1 | 1 | |
| Elevated temperature (≥37.3°C / 99.1°F) | +1 | 1 | |
| Labs | |||
| Leukocytosis (WBC >10,000/μL) | +2 | 1 | |
| Left shift (>75% neutrophils) | +1 | 1 | |
| Alvarado Score | / 10 | ||
| Interpretation | |
|---|---|
| 0–4 | Low risk — Appendicitis unlikely. Consider other diagnoses. |
| 5–6 | Equivocal — Consider CT imaging or observation with serial exams. |
| 7–8 | Probable appendicitis — Surgical consultation recommended. |
| 9–10 | Very probable appendicitis — Operative management almost certain. |
See Also
References
- ↑ Mourad J, et al. Appendicitis in pregnancy: new information that contradicts long-held clinical beliefs. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2000;182(5):1027-1029. PMID 10819817
- ↑ CODA Collaborative. A randomized trial comparing antibiotics with appendectomy for appendicitis. N Engl J Med. 2020;383(20):1907-1919. PMID 33017106
- Di Saverio S, et al. Diagnosis and treatment of acute appendicitis: 2020 update of the WSES Jerusalem guidelines. World J Emerg Surg. 2020;15:27. PMID 32295644
- Bhangu A, et al. Acute appendicitis: modern understanding of pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management. Lancet. 2015;386(10000):1278-1287. PMID 26460662
- Alvarado A. A practical score for the early diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Ann Emerg Med. 1986;15(5):557-564. PMID 3963537
