Appendiceal Intraluminal Gas: A CT Marker for Gangrenous Appendicitis

Author:

Ip Chantelle1,Wang Edward H.2,Croft Michael1,Lim Wanyin13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Royal Adelaide Hospital, Port Road, Adelaide 5000, Australia

2. Flinders Medical Centre, Flinders Dr, Bedford Park 5042, Australia

3. Dr Jones and Partners, 226 Greenhill Road, Eastwood 5065, Australia

Abstract

Introduction. This manuscript aims to investigate the amount of intraluminal gas in acute, nonperforated appendicitis identified on computed tomography (CT) in diagnosing gangrenous appendicitis. Methods. This is a retrospective observational, case-control study with consecutive data collected at a tertiary institution over a two-year period, of patients with CT-diagnosed acute appendicitis who subsequently went on for surgery within 48 hours. Patients who were less than 16 years old, who had an interval between CT and surgery of more than 48 hours, or with CT evidence of appendiceal perforation were excluded. Images were independently assessed by 3 radiologists for intraluminal gas, and the results were then correlated with reference standards obtained from surgical and histopathology reports for the diagnosis of nongangrenous versus gangrenous appendicitis. The sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of CT intraluminal gas in gangrenous appendicitis were calculated. Results. Our study identified 93 patients with nonperforated acute appendicitis who underwent surgery within the stated timeframe. Intraluminal gas in the appendix was identified in 26 patients (28%), of which 54% had macroscopic and/or microscopic evidence of gangrenous appendicitis. This is in contrast to the subgroup of patients who did not have intraluminal gas (72%), of which only 33% had gangrenous appendicitis. The specificity of intraluminal gas for gangrenous appendicitis is 79%, with a negative predictive value of 86% and likelihood ratio of 1.85. Conclusion. In cases of established acute appendicitis, the presence of intraluminal gas is a moderately specific sign for gangrenous complication. This is worth reporting as it can help prognosticate and triage patients accordingly, for a timelier surgical management and a better outcome.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology

Reference14 articles.

1. Emergency appendicectomy in Australia: findings from a multicentre, prospective study

2. Assessment of the reliability of the symptoms and signs of acute appendicitis;O. O. Rasmussen;Journal of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh,1991 1

3. Gangrenous appendicitis in children: a prospective evaluation of definition, bacteriology, histopathology, and outcomes

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