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Acute Appendicitis – Classic

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So the most common abnormality that we see

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with the appendix is acute appendicitis.

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Patients often present with right lower

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quadrant pain, fever, and pain may start at the

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umbilicus and move to the right lower quadrant.

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And they'll often have an elevated white count.

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And what acute appendicitis is, is

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it's an acute obstruction of the lumen.

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What happens is the appendix

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continues to secrete mucus.

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This causes increased pressure

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in the appendix, which dilates.

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This pressure then impairs the venous drainage

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and it can result in mucosal ulceration,

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and then you can get bacterial infection

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because the appendix, of course, is attached

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to the cecum where there's stool present.

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So what you can look for again,

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you follow that colon down.

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So up here, we have the hepatic flexure,

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you follow it down, we have the ascending colon,

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cecum, you have your ileocecal valve right here,

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there's your terminal ileum coming off, which

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looks normal, and then you have this thickening

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here, you have this inflamed appendix.

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It's hyper-enhancing.

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It's dilated.

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If you measure this, it would

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be greater than six millimeters.

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And then, most importantly, you have

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inflammation surrounding the appendix.

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This is the "itis" of acute appendicitis.

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We should note that most perforations are

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walled off because it is an obstructive

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process that causes acute appendicitis.

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You don't usually have free air

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because the air is trapped in the colon where

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it should be, as opposed to in the appendix.

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So it is uncommon to have free

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air, although of course you can.

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Here's the same case on coronal imaging.

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We start right here with the fatty valve

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so that you can figure out where the TI is.

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A few slices down.

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Here is your appendix coming

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right off of the cecum.

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Hyper-enhancing, thick wall.

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It's dilated greater than six millimeters.

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Then the inflammation surrounds it.

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Sometimes it can even almost layer here

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on the fascial lines here, and that's how

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you know it's coming from the appendix

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and not from the terminal ileum, or the

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cecum, or the colon, or some other "itis."

Report

Faculty

Kathryn McGillen, MD

Assistant Professor of Radiology, Medical Director of Ultrasound

Penn State University Milton S Hershey Medical Center

Tags

Infectious

Gastrointestinal (GI)

CT

Body

Appendix

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