Literature DB >> 26430424

Histopathological examination of appendicectomy specimens at a district hospital of Saudi Arabia.

Mohammad Ayub Jat1, Farhan Khashim Al-Swailmi2, Yasir Mehmood3, Majid Alrowaili4, Shehab Alanazi5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
OBJECTIVE: Appendicectomy for acute appendicitis is one of the most commonly performed surgical procedures. Acute appendicitis has remained a clinical entity and an ongoing diagnostic challenge. A retrospective study was performed to determine histological diagnosis, demographic data, the rate of perforated appendicitis and negative appendicectomies.
METHODS: Histopathological records of 480 resected appendices submitted to histopathology department at Arar Central Hospital in the Northern Border Province of Saudi Arabia over the period of 3 years from July 2011 to June 2014 were reviewed retrospectively, to determine acute appendicitis, complication (gangrene, perforation) rate, negative appendicectomy rate, histopathological diagnosis and unusual finding on histology.
RESULTS: Out of 480 specimens of appendix, appendicitis accounted for 466 (97.0%) with peak occurrence in the age group of 11 to 50 years in male and 11 to 40 years in female. Histopathological diagnosis include acute appendicitis 250 (52.0%), suppurative appendicitis 135 (28.0%) acute gangrenous appendicitis 60 (12.5%), perforated appendicitis 9 (2.0%), chronic appendicitis 12 (2.5%). Negative appendicectomy rate was 14 (3%) and two time more common in female with peak occurrence in the age group of 20-30 yrs. There was no unusual histological finding like carcinoid tumour of appendix.
CONCLUSION: The present study showed a high number of appendicitis in adolescents and young adults. Negative appendectomy was more common in females. The study support routine histological examination of all the appendicectomy specimens to avoid missing of any clinically important and treatable condition.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Appendicectomy; Appendicitis; Histopathology of appendix specimen

Year:  2015        PMID: 26430424      PMCID: PMC4590364          DOI: 10.12669/pjms.314.7453

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pak J Med Sci        ISSN: 1681-715X            Impact factor:   1.088


INTRODUCTION

Acute appendicitis is the most common general surgical emergency. The lifetime risk for appendicitis is 7%, commonly occurring in adolescent and young adults.1 The rate of acute appendicitis varies among countries. In USA and Europe there is a declining rates of acute appendicitis.2 In developing countries due to changes in life style there is increasing incidence in most urban centers.3 Despite of advances in technology and imaging modalities, there is dilemma in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis, however histopathological examination still remains the gold standard for the confirmation of appendicitis. There is evidence that intra-operative normal appendices may have abnormal incidental finding at cytology level and the practice of sending appendicectomy specimens for routine histopathological examination differs between centers as well as the literatures.4 This study aimed to determine the various histological diagnoses of all surgically removed appendices and to find out the age and sex related occurrence of appendicitis, the perforation rate and the rate of negative appendectomies.

METHODS

The present retrospective study was conducted in the Surgical Department Arar Central Hospital in Northern Border Province of Saudi Arabia during the three years period from July 2011 to June 2014. All emergency appendectomies and interval appendectomies performed on clinically suspected appendicitis were included. All appendicectomies were performed by open technique under general anaesthesia. All the surgically resected appendices submitted to Department of Pathology were included in this study. Exclusion criteria included patients who underwent concomitant resection of other intra abdominal organs such as Right hemicolectomy. Relevant clinical data retrieved included patients’ age, gender, pre-operative clinical presentation and operative findings. Various Histopathological diagnoses obtained from the appendicectomy specimens were retrieved from histopathological record registers and an assessment was made of whether histopathological diagnosis caused any alteration in the patient’s subsequent management or not. In acute appendicitis there are neutrophils in mucosa, wall of appendix and congested blood vessel with fibrinous exudates in the serosa while suppurative appendicitis associated with obstruction (fecalith, ball of worms) and abscess formation within the wall and foci of suppurative necrosis in the mucosa.5 Negative appendectomy was defined as one which is performed for a clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis but in which the appendix is found to be normal on histopathological examination.

RESULTS

Total of 480 specimens of appendix were received in the histopathology department at Arar Central Hospital during the period of 3 years from July 2011 to June 2014 Out of total 480 appendectomies there were 460 emergency appendectomy and 20 interval appendectomy performed for clinically suspicious appendicitis. In this study 466 (97.0%) cases were found to have histologically proven appendicitis and 14 (3%) cases were normal appendix. There were 280 (58.3%) males and 200 (41.7%) females, with the male: female ratio of 1.4:1. The mean age for male was 28 years with a range of 11 to 50 yrs. The mean age for female was 20.5 years with a range of 11 to 40 yrs. However male 247 cases (88%) with age group 11 to 50 years and in female 168 cases (84%) with age group 11 to 40 years. The distribution of acute appendicitis according to age group is shown in Table-I.
Table-I

The distribution of acute appendicitis according to age group.

Age GroupMale 280 (58.3%)Female 200 (41.7%)
< 10 YR186.5%105%
11 – 2010035.7%8040%
21 – 307526.8%5829%
31 – 405017.8%3316.5%
41 – 50227.8%157.5%
⊳ 51155.4%42%
The distribution of acute appendicitis according to age group. The Perforated appendicitis rate was 1.8% (9 out of 480 cases) and was seen more in female at the age interval of 12 – 30 years. The rate of negative appendectomy was 3% (14 out of 480 cases) significantly more in female patients with the female: male ratio of 2:1 in the age group of 21 to 30 years. The histopathological findings showed that the occurrence of acute appendicitis was 52% followed by acute suppurative 28% and gangrenous appendicitis 12.5%. The distribution of various histopathological findings of acute appendicitis by gender is shown in Table-II.
Table-II

The distribution of various histopathological findings of acute appendicitis by gender.

Histological FindingsFemale (n=200)Male (n= 280)Total (n=480)
Acute appendicitis47.5%(95)55.4%(155)52.0%(250)
Suppurative appendicitis32.5%(65)25.0%(70)28.0%(135)
Gangrenous appendicitis11.0%(22)13.5%(38)12.5%(60)
Perforated appendicitis2.5%(5)1.5%(4)2.0%(9)
Chronic appendicitis2.5%(5)2.5%(7)2.5%(12)
Normal appendix4%(8)2.1%(6)3%(14)
The distribution of various histopathological findings of acute appendicitis by gender.

DISCUSSION

Acute appendicitis has been the most common surgical emergency and appendectomy is the most frequently performed abdominal operation. In western world acute appendicitis account for about 40% of all surgical emergencies.6 Study at South Korea done by Lee et al., showed an overall incidence of appendicitis and appendectomy of 22.71 and 13.56 per 10,000 population per year, respectively which was found to be higher than that of western countries, i.e. 7.5 to 12.0 per 10,000 population per year.7 Study from Nepalgunj by Khan et al.,8 reported acute appendicitis to be the most common cause of emergency laparotomy showing incidence of 26%. About 80% of appendicitis occurre below 40 years of age in concordance with various studies,.9, In our study acute appendicitis was higher in the age group of second and third decade and about 85% of appendicitis occurring below 40 year of age. Some authors have reported a sex difference for appendicitis with male being more common than female. Some studies showed male to female ratio ranging from 1.1 to 2.9:1.10 Study by SalehAl–Mulhim showed 540(61.2%) patients were males and 38.8% were female, with a ratio 1.6:1.11 Study by Shrestha R et al. had slightly female preponderance with the female male ratio of 1.1:1.12 The present study showed 280 (58.3%) patients were male and 200 (41.7%) were female with a male: female ratio 1.4:1. There male preponderance could be because of majority of male adults coming from different part of the world in search of work to Saudi Arabia and might have disturbed the overall population structure. The present study showed that frequency of histopathological diagnosis was acute appendicitis (52.%) followed by acute suppurative (28%), acute gangrenous appendicitis (12.5%), acute perforated appendicitis (2%), resolving or chronic appendicitis (2.5%) similar results were also showed in other studies done by Shrestha R and Zulfikar et al.12,13 The perforation rate of appendix in this study was low (2%) similar to that shown by other studies.15 The low perforation rate might be due to early visit in the surgical clinic and the prompt decision to operate for suspected appendicitis by the surgeons. Low perforation rate indicate a better prospective regarding morbidity and mortality. The study showed Negative appendicectomy rate was 3% (14) cases, with female having higher rate frequently occurring within the younger age group of 11 to 30 yrs. The negative appendectomy rate falls within the acceptable range of 10 to 20%.6 Various studies,14,15 has shown a wide range of rate that falls between 6.1 to 34.2%, with higher value in female. Therefore, especially in females other causes of abdominal pain should be searched out if the appendix appears normal during operation. In this study we found other pathologies such as twisted ovarian cyst, follicular cyst and Meckel’s diverticulitis as the causes of acute abdominal pain in case of negative appendectomy, as also showed in other studies.16 The role of diagnostic laparoscopy followed by appendectomy if necessary in fertile female patients was found to reduce the rate of negative appendicectomy manifolds.17 A significant number of histologically normal appendix specimens (22.5%) showed increased cytokines expression, indicating an inflammatory reaction, therefore normal looking appendices have a 22% chance of being inflamed on further sophisticated investigations. Wang et al.18 demonstrated that TNF –α and interleukin - 2 expression are sensitive markers of inflammation in appendicitis. In the present study, there was not a single case of incidental carcinoid tumour of appendix. The literature review19 showed the incidence of carcinoid tumour ranging from 0.1% to 1.05% mostly found incidentally during microscopic examination.

CONCLUSION

The present study showed that histopathological examination of the appendix yield important clinical information in addition to the operative findings and should be undertaken in all cases of acute appendicitis.
  11 in total

1.  Evidence of an inflammatory pathologic condition in "normal" appendices following emergency appendectomy.

Authors:  L Nemeth; D J Reen; D S O'Briain; M McDermott; P Puri
Journal:  Arch Pathol Lab Med       Date:  2001-06       Impact factor: 5.534

2.  Incidence of acute nonperforated and perforated appendicitis: age-specific and sex-specific analysis.

Authors:  H Körner; K Söndenaa; J A Söreide; E Andersen; A Nysted; T H Lende; K H Kjellevold
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  1997 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 3.352

3.  Review of the pathological results of 2660 appendicectomy specimens.

Authors:  Ravi Marudanayagam; Geraint T Williams; Brian I Rees
Journal:  J Gastroenterol       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 7.527

4.  Retrospective analysis of abdominal surgeries at Nepalgunj Medical College (NGMC), Nepalgunj, Nepal: 2 year's experience.

Authors:  S Khan; I U Khan; S Aslam; A Haque
Journal:  Kathmandu Univ Med J (KUMJ)       Date:  2004 Oct-Dec

5.  Epidemiologic features of acute appendicitis in Ontario, Canada.

Authors:  Mohammed Al-Omran; Muhammad Mamdani; Robin S McLeod
Journal:  Can J Surg       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 2.089

6.  Is a histologically normal appendix following emergency appendicectomy alway normal?

Authors:  Y Wang; D J Reen; P Puri
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1996-04-20       Impact factor: 79.321

7.  Epidemiologic features, seasonal variations and false positive rate of acute appendicitis in Shahr-e-Rey, Tehran.

Authors:  Younes Jahangiri Noudeh; Nader Sadigh; Amir Yousef Ahmadnia
Journal:  Int J Surg       Date:  2006-05-18       Impact factor: 6.071

8.  Gynecologic pathologies in our appendectomy series and literature review.

Authors:  Omer Engin; Bulent Calik; Mehmet Yildirim; Ali Coskun; Gulnihal Ay Coskun
Journal:  J Korean Surg Soc       Date:  2011-04-12

9.  The epidemiology of appendicitis and appendectomy in South Korea: national registry data.

Authors:  Jung Hun Lee; Young Sun Park; Joong Sub Choi
Journal:  J Epidemiol       Date:  2009-12-19       Impact factor: 3.211

10.  The value of routine histopathological examination of appendicectomy specimens.

Authors:  Alun E Jones; Alexander W Phillips; John R Jarvis; Kevin Sargen
Journal:  BMC Surg       Date:  2007-08-10       Impact factor: 2.102

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1.  Fecal Loading at Caecum as a New Radiological Sign for Diagnosing Acute Appendicitis.

Authors:  Nazia Haider; Zahid Mehmood; Vijay Kumar; Marium Imran; Moiz Ahmed
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2022-01-03

2.  Complicated appendicitis increases the hospital length of stay.

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3.  Role of preoperative computed tomography in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis and reduction of negative appendectomy rates: Retrospective cross-sectional study.

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4.  Impact of routine histopathological examination of appendectomy specimens on patient management: a study of 4012 appendectomy specimens.

Authors:  Osama Elfaedy; Mohamed Benkhadoura; Akrem Elshaikhy; Khaled Elgazwi
Journal:  Turk J Surg       Date:  2019-09-23

5.  Negative Appendectomy Rate and Risk Factors That Influence Improper Diagnosis at King Abdulaziz University Hospital.

Authors:  Yara F Alhamdani; Hisham A Rizk; Mohammed R Algethami; Asma M Algarawi; Roia H Albadawi; Sofana N Faqih; Elaf H Ahmed; Ohud J Abukammas
Journal:  Mater Sociomed       Date:  2018-10

6.  The common motives for appendectomy in Hail Region Saudi Arabia.

Authors:  Fawaz D Alshammari; Hanan A Oreiby; Hussain Gadelkarim Ahmed; Khalid Alshaghdali; Jerold C Alcantara; Gamal Mohamed Elawad Ahmed; Sara A Seifeldin; Emad Abboh Abdallah Abboh; Waleed Mansi Al Shammari; Fawzia Mutasim M Al Tayeeb; Bandar S Al Saif; Ali Ahmed Al Qahtani; Samir Abdulkarim Alharbi; Ibtihag Siddig Elnaem
Journal:  AIMS Public Health       Date:  2020-03-03

7.  Histopathological examination of cases with acute appendicitis, A retrospective study at King Abdulaziz University Hospital, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Authors:  Mai Kadi; Ali Nasr; Alaa A Shabkah; Rothana Alnahari; Afnan Alhawi; Romaysaa Alyamani; Abdulaziz M Saleem
Journal:  Ann Med Surg (Lond)       Date:  2022-08-19

8.  Frequency, characteristics and outcomes of appendicular neuroendocrine tumors: A cross-sectional study from an academic tertiary care hospital.

Authors:  Abdelrahman Abdelaal; Walid El Ansari; Issam Al-Bozom; Mahwish Khawar; Fakhar Shahid; Ammar Aleter; Mohammed Rasoul Abunuwar; Ayman El-Menyar
Journal:  Ann Med Surg (Lond)       Date:  2017-07-19
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