| Literature DB >> 32341697 |
Pedro de J Wagner1, Muthana Haroon1, Stefan Morarasu1, Emmanuel Eguare1,2, Osama Al-Sahaf1,2.
Abstract
In surgical practice, surgeons request CT scans to rule out acute appendicitis, even in young patients. We aimed to assess the feasibility of using a CT scan to reduce the rate of negative laparoscopies in patients younger than 40 with equivocal signs of acute appendicitis. Therefore, we conducted a retrospective observational study on the patients admitted with a provisional diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Patients younger than 40 and with the Alvarado score between 3 and 6 were included. These were divided into two groups: those who had or did not have a CT scan. Each group was further subdivided into patients that had a laparoscopy and those that did not. Out of 204 patients included in the study, 16% were included in the CT group, and 84% in the non-CT group. 71.9% of the patients that underwent a CT scan had appendicitis and underwent an appendectomy. Five patients with a normal CT scan had appendectomy due to persistent signs of acute appendicitis. The histopathology of the 23 patients with positive CT was positive, and 3 of the 5 patients with negative CT that underwent appendectomy had positive histology results. The negative appendectomy rate for patients that had preoperative CT is 7.14% compared to 32.4% in patients without preoperative CT. The rate of negative laparoscopy in patients younger than 40 years old that undergo preoperative CT is significantly lower with a p-value of .00667. ©Carol Davila University Press.Entities:
Keywords: Acute appendicitis; CT scan; laparoscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32341697 PMCID: PMC7175439 DOI: 10.25122/jml-2019-0099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Life ISSN: 1844-122X
Figure 1:Cohort Overview.
Patients’ demographics.
| Groups | No. of patients | Female | Male | Mean age |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 172 | 76 (44.2%) | 96 (55.8%) | 23 | |
| 32 | 21 (65.6%) | 11 (34.4%) | 33 |
Histopathology findings.
| Groups | Histology Results | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simple appendicitis | Complicated appendicitis | Crohn’s | Normal appendix | |
| 91 (64.1%) | 5 (3.5%) | 1 (0.6%) | 45 (31.7%) | |
| 20 (71.4%) | 6 (21.4%) | 0 | 2 (7.14%) | |
Sensitivity and specificity of clinical evaluation versus CT scan in equivocal signs of appendicitis.
| Groups | False negative | False positive | True negative | True positive | Sensitivity | Specificity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 (2.3%) | 46 (26.7%) | 30 (0.6%) | 92 (53.5%) | 95.8% | 39.7% | |
| 3 (9.4%) | 0 | 5 (18.8%) | 23 (71.9%) | 88.4% | 100% |
Rate of negative and positive laparoscopy.
| Groups | Laparoscopy findings | |
|---|---|---|
| Negative laparoscopy | Positive laparoscopy | |
| No CT | 46 (32.4%) | 96 (67.6%) |
| CT | 2 (7.14%) | 26 (92.85%) |
Contingency table on comparing histologically-confirmed appendicitis chances in patients who have had or not a preoperative CT.
| Positive Histology (acute appendicitis) | Negative Histology | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CT confirmed Laparoscopic Appendectomy | 26 | 2 | 28 |
| No CT, clinically diagnosed Laparoscopic Appendectomy | 97 | 45 | 142 |