COLEGIO DE SAN JUAN DE LETRAN – CALAMBA
School of Nursing
Bo. Bucal, Calamba City
Case Study
On
Appendectomy
Submitted by:
3BSN1/GROUP#1
Ablaza, Yda Fenelie Adams, Hayrish
Ajes, Jied Edward Alarin, Vern Catherine
Alban, Abigail Alberto, Rommaela
Alcantara, Aris Alcoran, Ruth
Alpino, Blesshe Lou Andres, Burt Waldo
Andres, Dimitrius Antenor, Angelo
Submitted to:
Ms. Eden Cereno
APPENDECTOMY
An appendicectomy (or appendectomy) is the surgical removal of the vermiform appendix. This procedure is normally
performed as an emergency procedure, when the patient is suffering from acute appendicitis. In the absence of surgical facilities,
intravenous antibiotics are used to delay or avoid the onset of sepsis; it is now recognized that many cases will resolve when treated
non-operatively. In some cases the appendicitis resolves completely; more often, an inflammatory mass forms around the appendix.
This is a relative contraindication to surgery.
Appendectomy may be performed laparoscopically (this is called minimally invasive surgery) or as an open operation.
Laparoscopy is often used if the diagnosis is in doubt, or if it is desirable to hide the scars in the umbilicus or in the pubic hair line.
Recovery may be a little quicker with laparoscopic surgery; the procedure is more expensive and resource-intensive than open
surgery and generally takes a little longer, with the (low in most patients) additional risks associated with pneumoperitoneum
(inflating the abdomen with gas). Advanced pelvic sepsis occasionally requires a lower midline laparotomy.
In general terms, the procedure for an appendicectomy is as follows.
1. Antibiotics are given immediately if there are signs of sepsis, otherwise a single dose of prophylactic intravenous antibiotics is
given immediately prior to surgery.
2. General anaesthesia is induced, with endotracheal intubation and full muscle relaxation, and the patient is positioned supine.
3. The abdomen is prepared and draped and is examined under anesthesia.
4. If a mass is present, the incision is made over the mass; otherwise, the incision is made over McBurney's point, one third of
the way from the anterior superior iliac spine (ASIS) and the umbilicus; this represents the position of the base of the
appendix (the position of the tip is variable).
5. The various layers of the abdominal wall are then opened.
6. The effort is always to preserve the integrity of abdominal wall. Therefore, the External Oblique Aponeurosis is slitted along
its fiber, and the internal oblique muscle is split along its length, not cut. As the two run at right angles to each other, this
prevents later Incisional hernia.
7. On entering the peritoneum, the appendix is identified, mobilized and then ligated and divided at its base.
8. Some surgeons choose to bury the stump of the appendix by inverting it so it points into the caecum.
9. Each layer of the abdominal wall is then closed in turn.
10. The skin may be closed with staples or stitches.
11. The wound is dressed.
12. The patient will be brought to the recovery room.
APPENDICITIS
Appendicitis is inflammation of the appendix. It is thought that appendicitis begins when the opening from the appendix into the
cecum becomes blocked. The blockage may be due to a build-up of thick mucus within the appendix or to stool that enters the
appendix from the cecum. The mucus or stool hardens, becomes rock-like, and blocks the opening. This rock is called a fecalith
(literally, a rock of stool). At other times, the lymphatic tissue in the appendix may swell and block the appendix. Bacteria which
normally are found within the appendix then begin to invade (infect) the wall of the appendix. The body responds to the invasion by
mounting an attack on the bacteria, an attack called inflammation. (An alternative theory for the cause of appendicitis is an initial
rupture of the appendix followed by spread of bacteria outside the appendix.. The cause of such a rupture is unclear, but it may
relate to changes that occur in the lymphatic tissue that line the wall of the appendix.)
If the inflammation and infection spread through the wall of the appendix, the appendix can rupture. After rupture, infection can
spread throughout the abdomen; however, it usually is confined to a small area surrounding the appendix (forming a peri-
appendiceal abscess).
Sometimes, the body is successful in containing ("healing") the appendicitis without surgical treatment if the infection and
accompanying inflammation do not spread throughout the abdomen. The inflammation, pain and symptoms may disappear. This is
particularly true in elderly patients and when antibiotics are used. The patients then may come to the doctor long after the episode
of appendicitis with a lump or a mass in the right lower abdomen that is due to the scarring that occurs during healing. This lump
might raise the suspicion of cancer.
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
The main symptom of appendicitis is abdominal pain. The pain is at first diffuse and poorly localized, that is, not confined to
one spot. (Poorly localized pain is typical whenever a problem is confined to the small intestine or colon, including the appendix.)
The pain is so difficult to pinpoint that when asked to point to the area of the pain, most people indicate the location of the pain
with a circular motion of their hand around the central part of their abdomen. A second, common, early symptom of appendicitis is
loss of appetite which may progress to nausea and even vomiting. Nausea and vomiting also may occur later due to intestinal
obstruction.
As appendiceal inflammation increases, it extends through the appendix to its outer covering and then to the lining of the abdomen,
a thin membrane called the peritoneum. Once the peritoneum becomes inflamed, the pain changes and then can be localized clearly
to one small area. Generally, this area is between the front of the right hip bone and the belly button. The exact point is named after
Dr. Charles McBurney--McBurney's point. If the appendix ruptures and infection spreads throughout the abdomen, the pain
becomes diffuse again as the entire lining of the abdomen becomes inflamed.
DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES
The diagnosis begins with a thorough history and physical examination. Patients often have an elevated temperature, and there
usually will be moderate to severe tenderness in the right lower abdomen when the doctor pushes there. If inflammation has spread
to the peritoneum, there is frequently rebound tenderness. This means that when the doctor pushes on the abdomen and then
quickly releases his hand, the pain becomes suddenly but transiently worse.
White Blood Cell Count
The white blood cell count in the blood usually becomes elevated with infection. In early appendicitis, before infection sets
in, it can be normal, but most often there is at least a mild elevation even early. Unfortunately, appendicitis is not the only condition
that causes elevated white blood cell counts. Almost any infection or inflammation can cause this count to be abnormally high.
Therefore, an elevated white blood cell count alone cannot be used as a sign of appendicitis.
Urinalysis
Urinalysis is a microscopic examination of the urine that detects red blood cells, white blood cells and bacteria in the urine.
Urinalysis usually is abnormal when there is inflammation or stones in the kidneys or bladder which sometimes can be confused with
appendicitis. Therefore, an abnormal urinalysis suggests that there is a kidney or bladder problem while a normal urinalysis is more
characteristic of appendicitis.
Abdominal X-Ray
An abdominal x-ray may detect the fecalith (the hardened and calcified, pea-sized piece of stool that blocks the appendiceal
opening) that may be the cause of appendicitis. This is especially true in children.
Ultrasound
An ultrasound is a painless procedure that uses sound waves to identify organs within the body. Ultrasound can identify an
enlarged appendix or an abscess. Nevertheless, during appendicitis, the appendix can be seen in only 50% of patients. Therefore, not
seeing the appendix during an ultrasound does not exclude appendicitis. Ultrasound also is helpful in women because it can exclude
the presence of conditions involving the ovaries, fallopian tubes and uterus that can mimic appendicitis.
Barium Enema
A barium enema is an x-ray test where liquid barium is inserted into the colon from the anus to fill the colon. This test can, at
times, show an impression on the colon in the area of the appendix where the inflammation from the adjacent inflammation
impinges on the colon. Barium enema also can exclude other intestinal problems that mimic appendicitis, for example Crohn's
disease.
CT Scan
In patients who are not pregnant, a CT Scan of the area of the appendix is useful in diagnosing appendicitis and peri-
appendiceal abscesses as well as in excluding other diseases inside the abdomen and pelvis that can mimic appendicitis.
Laparoscopy
Laparoscopy is a surgical procedure wherein a small fiberoptic tube with a camera is inserted into the abdomen through a
small puncture made on the abdominal wall. Laparoscopy allows a direct view of the appendix as well as other abdominal and pelvic
organs. If appendicitis is found, the inflamed appendix can be removed at the same time. The disadvantage of laparoscopy
compared to ultrasound and CT scanning is that it requires a general anesthetic.
There is no one test that will diagnose appendicitis with certainty. Therefore, the approach to suspected appendicitis may
include a period of observation, tests as previously discussed, or surgery.
HOW APPENDECTOMY IS DONE?
During an appendectomy, an incision two to three inches in length is made through the skin and the layers of the abdominal
wall in the area of the appendix. The surgeon enters the abdomen and looks for the appendix, usually located in the right lower
abdomen. After examining the area around the appendix to be certain that no additional problem is present, the appendix is
removed. This is done by freeing the appendix from its attachment to the abdomen and to the colon, cutting the appendix from the
colon, and sewing the over the hole in the colon. If an abscess is present, the pus can be drained with drains (rubber tubes) that go
from the abscess and out through the skin. The abdominal incision then is closed.
Newer techniques for removing the appendix involve the use of the laparoscope. The laparoscope is a thin telescope
attached to a video camera that allows the surgeon to inspect the inside of the abdomen through a small puncture wound (instead
of a larger incision). If appendicitis is found, the appendix can be removed with special instruments that can be passed into the
abdomen, just like the laparoscope, through small puncture wounds. The benefits of the laparoscopic technique include less post-
operative pain (since much of the post-surgery pain comes from incisions) and a speedier recovery. An additional advantage of
laparoscopy is that it allows the surgeon to look inside the abdomen to make a clear diagnosis in cases in which the diagnosis of
appendicitis is in doubt. For example, laparoscopy is especially helpful in menstruating women in whom a rupture of an ovarian cysts
may mimic appendicitis.
If the appendix is not ruptured (perforated) at the time of surgery, the patient generally is sent home from the hospital in
one or two days. Patients whose appendix has perforated generally are sicker than patients without perforation. After surgery, their
hospital stay often is prolonged (four to seven days), particularly if peritonitis has occurred. Intravenous antibiotics are given in the
hospital to fight infection and assist in resolving any abscess.
Occasionally, the surgeon may find a normal-appearing appendix and no other cause for the patient's problem. In this
situation, the surgeon may remove the appendix. The reasoning in these cases is that it is better to remove a normal-appearing
appendix than to miss and not treat appropriately an early or mild case of appendicitis.
COMPLICATIONS
The most common complication of appendectomy is infection of the wound, that is, of the surgical incision. Such infections
vary in severity from mild, with only redness and perhaps some tenderness over the incision, to moderate, requiring only antibiotics,
to severe, requiring antibiotics and surgical treatment. Occasionally, the inflammation and infection of appendicitis are so severe
that the surgeon will not close the incision at the end of the surgery because of concern that the wound is already infected. Instead,
the surgical closing is postponed for several days to allow the infection to subside with antibiotic therapy and make it less likely for
infection to occur within the incision. Another complication of appendectomy is an abscess, a collection of pus in the area of the
appendix.
TYPES OF APPENDECTOMY
Traditional open appendectomy
When the surgeon uses the open approach, he makes an incision in the lower right section of the abdomen. Most incisions
are less than 3 in (7.6 cm) in length. The surgeon then identifies all of the organs in the abdomen and examines them for other
disease or abnormalities. The appendix is located and brought up into the wounds. The surgeon separates the appendix from all the
surrounding tissue and its attachment to the cecum and then removes it. The site where the appendix was previously attached, the
cecum, is closed and returned to the abdomen. The muscle layers and then the skin are sewn together.
Laparoscopic appendectomy
When the surgeon conducts a laproscopic appendectomy, four incisions, each about 1 in (2.5 cm) in length, are made. One
incision is near the umbilicus, or navel, and one is between the umbilicus and the pubis. Two other incisions are smaller and are in
the right side of the lower abdomen. The surgeon then passes a camera and special instruments through these incisions. With the
aid of this equipment, the surgeon visually examines the abdominal organs and identifies the appendix. Similarly, the appendix is
freed from all of its attachments and removed. The place where the appendix was formerly attached, the cecum, is stitched. The
appendix is removed through one of the incisions. The instruments are removed and then all of the incisions are closed.
Studies and opinions about the relative advantages and disadvantages of each method are divided. A skilled surgeon can perform
either one of these procedures in less than one hour. However, laproscopic appendectomy (LA) always takes longer than traditional
appendectomy (TA). The increased time required to do a LA increases the patient's exposure to anesthetics, which increases the risk
of complications. The increased time requirement also escalates fees charged by the hospital for operating room time and by the
anesthesiologist. Since LA also requires specialized equipment, the fees for its use also increases the hospital charges. Patients with
either operation have similar pain medication needs, begin eating diets at comparable times, and stay in the hospital equivalent
amounts of time. LA is of special benefit in women in whom the diagnosis is difficult and gynecological disease (such as
endometriosis, pelvic inflammatory disease, ruptured ovarian follicles, ruptured ovarian cysts, and tubal pregnancies) may be the
source of pain and not appendicitis. If LA is done in these patients, the pelvic organs can be more thoroughly examined and a
definitive diagnosis made prior to removal of the appendix. Most surgeons select either TA or LA based on the individual needs and
circumstances of the patient.
RISKS
Risks for any anesthesia include the following:
Reactions to medications
Problems breathing
Risks for any surgery include the following:
Bleeding
Infection
Additional risks with an appendectomy with ruptured appendix include the following:
Longer hospital stays
Side effects from medications
AFTER THE PROCEDURE
Patients tend to recover quickly after a simple appendectomy. Most patients leave the hospital in 1 - 3 days after the
operation. Normal activities can be resumed within 1 - 3 weeks after leaving the hospital.
Recovery is slower and more complicated if the appendix has ruptured or an abscess has formed.
Living without an appendix causes no known health problems.
ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY
the appendix (or vermiform appendix; also cecal (or caecal) appendix; also vermix) is a blind-ended tube connected to the
cecum (or caecum), from which it develops embryologically. The cecum is a pouchlike structure of the colon. The appendix is located
near the junction of the small intestine and the large intestine.
The term "vermiform" comes from Latin and means "worm-shaped".
Size and location
The appendix averages 10 cm in length, but can range from 2 to 20 cm. The diameter of the appendix is usually between 7
and 8 mm. The longest appendix ever removed measured 26 cm in Zagreb, Croatia. The appendix is located in the lower quadrant of
the abdomen, or more specifically, the right iliac fossa. Its position within the abdomen corresponds to a point on the surface known
as McBurney's point. While the base of the appendix is at a fairly constant location, 2 cm below the ileocaecal valve, the location of
the tip of the appendix can vary from being retrocaecal (74%) to being in the pelvis to being extraperitoneal. In rare individuals with
situs inversus, the appendix may be located in the lower left side.
Function
Given the appendix's propensity to cause death by infection, and general good health of people who have had their appendix
removed or who have a congenital absence of an appendix, the appendix is traditionally thought to have no function in the human
body.There have been no reports of impaired immune or gastrointestinal function in people without an appendix.
Vermiform appendix
The most common explanation is that the human appendix is a vestigial structure which has lost its original function. (There
has been little study of its function in the other animals in which it occurs—apes, wombats and some rodents—or comparison with
animals in which it does not occur.) In The Story of Evolution, Joseph McCabe argued:
The vermiform appendage—in which some recent medical writers have vainly endeavoured to find a utility—is the shrunken
remainder of a large and normal intestine of a remote ancestor. This interpretation would stand even if it were found to have a
certain use in the human body. Vestigial organs are sometimes pressed into a secondary use when their original function has been
lost.
One potential ancestral purpose put forth by Charles Darwin was that the appendix was used for digesting leaves as
primates. It may be a vestigial organ of ancient humans that has degraded down to nearly nothing over the course of evolution.
Evidence can be seen in herbivorous animals such as the koala. The cecum of the koala is very long, enabling it to host bacteria
specific for cellulose breakdown. Human ancestors may have also relied upon this system and lived on a diet rich in foliage. As
people began to eat more easily digested foods, they became less reliant on cellulose-rich plants for energy. The cecum became less
necessary for digestion and mutations that previously had been deleterious were no longer selected against. These alleles became
more frequent and the cecum continued to shrink. After thousands of years, the once-necessary cecum has degraded to what we
see today, with the appendix. Evolutionary theorists have suggested that natural selection selects for larger appendices because
smaller and thinner appendices would be more susceptible to inflammation and disease.
Immune function
New studies propose that the appendix may harbor and protect bacteria that are beneficial in the function of the human
colon. Loren G. Martin, a professor of physiology at Oklahoma State University, argues that the appendix has a function in fetuses
and adults. Endocrine cells have been found in the appendix of 11 week old fetuses that contribute to "biological control
(homeostatic) mechanisms." In adults, Martin argues that the appendix acts as a lymphatic organ. The appendix is experimentally
verified as being rich in infection-fighting lymphoid cells, suggesting that it might play a role in the immune system. Zahid suggests
that it plays a role in both manufacturing hormones in fetal development as well as functioning to "train" the immune system,
exposing the body to antigens so that it can produce antibodies. He notes that doctors in the last decade have stopped removing the
appendix during other surgical procedures as a routine precaution, because it can be successfully transplanted into the urinary tract
to rebuild a sphincter muscle and reconstruct a functional bladder.
Maintaining gut flora
Although it was long accepted that the immune tissue, called gut associated lymphoid tissue, surrounding the appendix and
elsewhere in the gut carries out a number of important functions, explanations were lacking for the distinctive shape of the
appendix and its apparent lack of importance as judged by an absence of side-effects following appendectomy. William Parker,
Randy Bollinger, and colleagues at Duke University proposed that the appendix serves as a haven for useful bacteria when illness
flushes those bacteria from the rest of the intestines. This proposal is based on a new understanding of how the immune system
supports the growth of beneficial intestinal bacteria, in combination with many well-known features of the appendix, including its
architecture and its association with copious amounts of immune tissue. Such a function is expected to be useful in a culture lacking
modern sanitation and healthcare practice, where diarrhea may be prevalent.