IntroductionAcute appendicitis is a common emergency surgical presentation. The gold standard treatment is surgery. Like any surgical procedure, appendicectomy is associated with complications. Negative appendicectomy (NA) can occur, and its incidence is 15%-39%. This study aimed to evaluate the rate and predictors of NA in a cohort. Patients and methodsA retrospective study over a year through which data of patients who underwent emergency appendicectomies were collected and analyzed. The absence of inflammatory process and/or other significant pathology in the appendix was considered negative for appendicitis. An utter definition of NA was the absence of inflammatory cells in the appendix. The NA rate (NAR) was calculated using the standard criteria (NAR-SDC) and the strict criteria (NAR-STC). The routine laboratory parameters for diagnosing acute appendicitis on admission were collected. Increased inflammatory markers in the form of leucocytosis of total WBC > 11,000 per mm, elevated CPR > 5 mg/L, and isolated elevated total serum bilirubin > 20 µmol/L, were suggestive of acute appendicitis. ResultsThree hundred and seventy-two patients were included, 179 males and 193 females with a median age were 27 (5-94) years. The median duration of symptoms and waiting time to surgery were two days and one day, respectively. The mean admission WBC, C-reactive protein (CRP) and serum bilirubin levels were 12,600 (3,000-38,000)/mm 3 , 66.9 (1-323) mg/L and 12.7 (4-38) µmol/L respectively. Laparoscopic appendicectomy was performed in 93.5% of patients with a conversion rate of 4.6%. NAR-SDC was 10.2% and NAR-STC was 25.8%. NAR was significantly higher in females than males (39.4% versus 11.1%; p-value 0.0001). Patients with NA were younger (p-value 0.0001), had lower mean total WBC (p-value 0.014), CRP (p-value 0.0001) and total serum bilirubin (p-value 0.0001) levels on admission. ConclusionNA is still a major problem in the management of patients with acute right lower abdominal pain. Our NAR compared favourably with reported rates. Female gender, duration of symptoms more than three days, and lower total WBC were independent predictors of NA.
The overarching aim of pharmacovigilance is to ensure the safe and effective usage of medication across the population and optimise medicines through holistic considerations. However, within the heterogeneous elderly population, several unique factors are at play, limiting the ability of clinicians to fulfil this aim. A matured physiology influencing the response and effects of drugs, increased polypharmacy enabling drugdrug interactions, and greater consumption of concurrent herbal medicines predispose patients to harmful drug events. This increasingly multimorbid subpopulation requires complex pharmaceutical regimens encouraging inappropriate prescribing and medicine non-adherence leading to suboptimal therapy. Furthermore, restrictive practices in clinical trials commonly exclude elderly patients creating disparities from expected findings within a real-world setting. These issues create an environment where elderly patients are at a heightened risk of adverse drug events and clinicians are forced to make significant decisions from limited information. With projections showing that this demographic will continue growing in size, the true burden of these limiting factors is yet to be realised.
Introduction Negative appendicectomy (NA) is still a major issue following appendicectomy. We evaluated the rate and predictors of negative appendicectomy in a cohort. Patients and Methods Data of patients who underwent emergency appendicectomies over a year was collected and analysed. The absence of inflammation and/or other significant pathology in the appendix was considered negative by standard definition. A stricter definition of NA was the absence of inflammatory cells in the appendix. Negative appendicectomy rate (NAR) was calculated using the standard criteria (NAR-SDC) and the strict criteria (NAR-STC). Results 372 patients were included, 179 males and 193 females with a median age of 27 (5-94) years. Median duration of symptoms and waiting time to surgery were 2 days and 1 day respectively. The mean admission WBC and CRP were 12,600 (3000-38000)/mm3 and 66.9 (1-323) mg/L respectively. Laparoscopic appendicectomy was performed in 93.5% of patients with a conversion rate of 4.6%. NAR-SDC was 10.2% and NAR-STC was 25.8%. NAR was significantly higher in females than males (39.4% versus 11.1%; p-value 0.0001). Patients with NA were younger (p-value 0.0001), had lower mean total WBC (p-value 0.014) and CRP (p-value 0.0001) on admission. Independent predictors of negative appendicectomy are female gender, duration of symptoms more than 3 days, and lower total WBC. Conclusion NA is still a major problem in the management of patients with acute right lower abdominal pain. Our NAR compared favourably with reported rates. Female gender, symptoms duration more than 3 days, lower WBC are independent predictors of NA.
Introduction Appendectomy is associated with complications and negative appendicectomy. We evaluated the rate and predictors of NAR in a cohort. Method Patients' data who underwent emergency appendicectomies over a year was analysed. A definition of NA; absence of inflammatory cells in the appendix. The NAR was calculated using (NAR-SDC) and (NAR-STC). Leucocytosis was a total WBC >11000/mm3, elevated CPR >5 mg/L. Results 372 patients were included. Median durations of symptoms 2 days. The mean admission WBC, CRP and serum bilirubin levels were 12,600 (3000-38000)/mm3, 66.9 (1-323) mg/L and 12.7 (4-38) µmol/L respectively. Laparoscopic appendectomy was performed in 93.5% with a conversion rate of 4.6%.NAR-SDC was 10.2% and NAR-STC was 25.8%. NAR was higher in females than males (39.4% versus 11.1%; p-value 0.0001). Patients with NA were younger (p-value 0.0001), had lower WBC (p-value 0.014), CRP (p-value 0.0001) levels on admission. Female gender, duration of symptoms more than 3 days, lower WBC were found to be predictors of NAR. Conclusions NA is a problem in management of patients with acute right lower abdominal pain. Our NAR compared favourably with reported rates. Female gender, symptoms more than 3 days, lower WBC were predictors of NA.
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