Interactive Transcript
0:01
So the next step with acute appendicitis,
0:03
if the patients don't present quite as
0:05
early, they can develop an abscess itself.
0:08
So again, same process.
0:09
You follow that colon down until you
0:10
reach the cecum, the terminal ileum.
0:12
And in this patient, we have a
0:14
marked inflammatory process going
0:16
on in the right lower quadrant.
0:17
Here is her appendix right here.
0:19
Again, same as the other cases, thick
0:21
walled, hyper-enhancing, dilated,
0:24
marked inflammation surrounding it.
0:25
And again, it's a blind
0:26
ending tubular structure.
0:27
It does end.
0:28
It doesn't keep going such
0:29
as the terminal ileum.
0:31
But as you scroll down further,
0:33
you now see this fluid collection.
0:35
It has a well-defined enhancing wall.
0:38
If you put hounsfield units on it, it's
0:39
most likely going to be less than 20.
0:42
This isn't just simple ascites,
0:44
again, because it has a wall here.
0:45
It's loculated at this portion.
0:48
It's not free fluid.
0:50
And in her case, unfortunately, she
0:51
has a second collection a little
0:53
bit lower down in her pelvis.
0:54
Again, thick, enhancing walls,
0:56
mild inflammation, and a little
0:58
bit of gas in it as well.
0:59
These are consistent with abscesses.
1:02
So in general to tell an abscess from
1:04
free fluid, because you certainly can
1:05
get reactive free fluid in a case of
1:07
appendicitis, is that this has volume.
1:10
An abscess does.
1:11
It's going to push other
1:12
structures away from it.
1:14
It doesn't just have concave margins
1:16
and fill whatever space that it has.
1:19
Other things to keep in mind is that when
1:20
you have an abscess, generally they need
1:22
to be three centimeters or greater to
1:24
drain if they are in an amenable location.
1:26
In this particular patient, you
1:28
can see her collections reach up to
1:30
her peritoneal lining right here.
1:32
reaching towards her skin surface
1:34
with no bowel in the way to block the
1:35
potential drainage of the catheter.
1:38
Most surgeons, if they have an abscess, would
1:40
prefer to have a percutaneous tube placed
1:43
prior to having surgery to help them cool down.
1:47
So this is our same patient.
1:48
She's actually 11 years old,
1:50
coming in with acute appendicitis
1:51
with those two large abscesses.
1:54
So the surgeons asked before going to
1:56
the operating room to place percutaneous
1:58
drainage catheters into the abscesses.
2:01
This is her CT scan low dose prior to her
2:04
procedure for percutaneous drainage catheters.
2:06
You can see these bright spots right here
2:08
are the ureters, and that's because this
2:10
was only a few hours after her CT scan.
2:12
She was still excreting contrast.
2:14
In this case, it was actually really helpful
2:16
because we could use them as a marker to know
2:18
where her ureters were so that we wouldn't
2:21
put a catheter through them.
2:22
You do have a lot of streak artifact
2:24
from the contrast in her bladder.
2:26
In this case, we wanted to keep it there so
2:28
that we could see exactly where the bladder
2:30
was to differentiate it from an abscess.
2:32
So you can see here a low dose CT scan is
2:34
used to guide percutaneous drainage catheters.
2:37
And even lower doses are what were used when
2:39
we actually placed the catheters here.
2:41
So you can see in these fluoroscopic CT
2:43
images right here, when the needle goes into
2:45
the different collections, very low dose.
2:48
So you can get the minimal amount of
2:49
radiation to the patient that is necessary
2:52
to get these drainage catheters in place.
2:54
Here's one going into that deeper collection
2:56
as well.
2:58
And then we place a second catheter
2:59
at the more superior anterior location
3:02
to drain these as best as we could.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.