Title: A Retrospective Study on Atypical Presentations of Uncomplicated Appendicitis in a Tertiary Centre with Emphasis on Management Strategy

Authors: Tarun D. Rochlani, Pratik S. Shaparia, Harsh P. Trivedi, Tosha J. Desai

 DOI:  https://dx.doi.org/10.18535/jmscr/v6i7.163

Abstract

Background: Acute appendicitis is one of the most common surgical emergencies encountered routinely. The classic symptoms occur in just over half of patients with acute appendicitis therefore, an accurate and timely diagnosis of atypical appendicitis remains clinically challenging.

Aim: The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of atypical presentations among patients diagnosed with appendicitis, to investigate which atypical features are the strongest positive predictors for appendicitis among patients being evaluated for appendicitis and to determine whether atypical presentation has any role in modifying conventional management strategies.

Materials and Methods: Case files of 100 patients admitted and treated in a tertiary referral centre from January 2016 to January 2018 with confirmed diagnosis of appendicitis were retrospectively analysed for the variability in their clinical presentation and the data was correlated with intra-operative findings. The management strategy employed for each patient was studied with emphasis on any modification employed for atypical cases.

Summary: 34% of patients in study population had features of atypical appendicitis. The most common age-group with atypical cases were 11-20 (24%). The most common symptom in atypical cases was pain(100%) followed by nausea/vomiting(41%), fever(35%), urinary symptoms(35%), diarhhoea (12%) and vaginal discharge(6%). The most common sign on abdominal examination in atypical cases was localised tenderness(30%) followed by localised guarding/rigidity(12%), rovsing’s sign(6%), psoas sign(6%) and obturator sign(6%). Diagnostic accuracy of ultrasound and CT abdomen in atypical cases was very high being 82% and 100% respectively. Despite the atypical presentations the treatment in majority cases remained operative with laparoscopic appendicetomy(59%) being most common followed by standard appendicectomy(12%), while 29% of patients were treated with conservative management.

Conclusion: Knowledge about the variable presentations of atypical uncomplicated appendicitis,a very common condition can aid in timely and confident diagnosis and intra-operative location of appendix can be presumed. However, the management in such cases is not dependent on clinical presentation in uncomplicated cases but depends on patient’s comorbidities and surgeon’s discretion.

Keywords: Atypical appendicitis, acute appendicitis, management

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Corresponding Author

Tarun D. Rochlani