- The appendix is a blind ended tube connected to the caecum, located in right lower quadrant
Anatomy
- The appendix is located at the terminal end of the caecum, where the three taeniae join
- It is about 5-10 cm in size
- Supplied by the appendiceal artery
- Abdominal aorta → superior mesenteric a. → ileocolic a. →appendiceal artery
- Positions of the appendix can be – retrocaecal, pre-ileal, post-ileal, pelvic, subcaecal, paracaecal
Epidemiology/Etiology
- Most common in males and Caucasians
- Low fibre diet
- Family history
- Viral infection causes mucosal edema and inflammation – eventually gets infected by bacteria and causes appendicitis
- Most common organisms – E.coli, enterococci, streptococci, bacteroides
- Pseudoappendicitis – acute ileus following Yersinia infection can mimic acute appendicitis
- Obstructive appendicitis is due to obstruction of the appendix lumen, can be as a result of
- Blockage – faecoliths, stricture, foreign bodies, roundworms
- Adhesions and kinking – carcinoma caecum
Pathogenesis
Acute non-obstructive appendicitis (Features – redness, edema, haemorrhage)
- Acute inflammation of mucous membrane with secondary infection without obstruction
- Can lead to resolution, ulceration, fibrosis, recurrent appendicitis, gangrene, peritonitis
Acute obstructive peritonitis (Features – blackish, edema, gangrenous)
- Mucus and inflammatory fluid collects inside lumen – leads to increased intraluminal pressure, which results in
- Blockage of lymphatic and venous drainage – causing mucosal ulceration and ischemia
- Thrombosis of appendicular artery – causing ischemic necrosis of full thickness of wall of appendix
- This leads to gangrene of appendix and subsequent perforation
- Perforation leads to bacterial spread through submucosa and muscularis propria
- After perforation, the suppuration and pus forms an appendicular abscess
- The abscess is localised by the greater omentum and dilated ileum
- If the abscess spreads it can cause peritonitis
Recurrent appendicitis
- Repeated attacks of non-obstructive appendicitis leads to fibrosis and adhesions
Subacute appendicitis – milder form of acute appendicitis
Stump appendicitis – retained long stump of appendix after laparoscopic appendectomy
Clinical features
- Murphy’s triad – pain, vomiting, temperature
- Periumbilical pain that moves to right iliac fossa, exacerbation of pain with coughing
- Vomiting – due to reflex pylorospasm
- Constipation
- Fever, tachycardia
- Urinary frequency – inflamed appendix causes bladder irritation
- Perforation – intense diffuse abdominal pain, fever, tachycardia
Signs
- McBurney’s point – tenderness and rebound tenderness
- Sherren’s triangle – area of tenderness found characteristically found in acute appendicitis
- The triangle boundaries are the umbilicus, the anterior superior iliac spine and the pubic symphysis
- Dunphy’s sign – pain on coughing
- Rovsing’s sign – pain in right iliac fossa when palpating left iliac fossa
- Obturator’s sign (pelvic appendicitis) – pain on internal rotation of hip
- Iliopsoas sign (retrocaecal appendicitis) – pain on extension of right hip
- Sitkovskiy’s sign – when patient turns onto left hand side there is pain on the right hand side
Differential diagnosis
- Perforated duodenal ulcer – fluid trickles down right paracolic gutter and mimics appendicitis
- Upper abdominal pain and gas under diaphragm differentiate the conditions
- Acute cholecystitis – pain in upper right quadrant, fever, jaundice,
- US and LFTs to differentiate
- Acute pancreatitis – epigastric pain radiating to back, raised amylase and lipase
- Acute bacterial enterocolitis – pain in abdomen, diarrhoea, toxaemia, dehydration
- Crohn’s disease
- Meckel’s diverticulitis
- ISS – more common in <2 year olds whereas appendicitis is rare <2 year olds
Investigations
- Ultra sound – classifies the appendicitis into
- Catarrhal – clear layer structure of appendiceal wall and mucosal edema
- Phlegmonous – ill-defined layer structure of appendiceal wall, moderate enlargement of appendix
- Gangrenous – unidentifiable layer structure of appendiceal wall and marked enlargement to form a mass
- Laparoscopy
- Contrast CT – shows dilated appendix and lumen, thickened wall, non-filling of lumen by contrast, presence of mass/abscess
- X-ray
- ↑WCC and CRP
Treatment
- Surgical approaches for appendectomy
- Gridiron incision – incision is perpendicular to the right spinoumbilical line at the McBurney’s point
- Lanz crease incision – cosmetically better
- Laparoscopic approach
- IV antibiotics – metronidazole, cefuroxime
Complications
- Perforation
- Appendix mass – inflamed appendix becomes covered by omentum
- Appendix abscess – when appendix mass fails to resolve but enlarges and requires surgical drainage and ABs