Places I Love
Newest Articles
- Herpes Free Life
- Less fat with Alli
- The Solution for Your Algebra Problems
- The Stable Investment in the World
- Accessorize Your Car with the Finest Exhaust
- Cream Pie Porn
- Loud the Sound of Music through the Car
- Avoiding Problems in Driver Installation
- Girly Pepper Spray: Fancy and Powerful
- Car’s Review of the Professional
- Free Casino Games
- Contact Lens Advisor
- Buying Ford Accessories at Carid.com
- Qualified American Flags in Largest Options and Amounts
- Affordable Eyeglasses to Increase Your Confidence
Most Views
- Childhood Diabetes: Signs and Symptoms
- The Basic Facts of High Blood Pressure
- Schools Get a Failing Grade on Skin Cancer Smarts
- An Enlarged Prostate Causes Loss of Sleep
- Save Your Life with a Sleep Disorder Test
- The Best Sinus Help
- Is There Actually a Cold Sore Cure?
- Try These Simple Treatments of Sinus Infection
- Wild Blue Satellite Internet
- Gestational Diabetes: Best Health For Mom and Baby
| The benefits of ultrasonography in diagnosing appendicitis |
|
|
|
| Written by Groshan Fabiola |
|
Doctors know nowadays that diagnosing appendicitis is most easy and most difficult at the same time. Symptoms like pain around the navel, nausea, vomiting can also be caused by other disorders in the abdominal area. The pain in appendicitis localizes in the right ileal fossa where a sensation of tenderness and discomfort occurs due to the implication of the peritoneum. Blood testing is usually of little value and can mislead the diagnosis. The base of diagnosing appendicitis remains the clinical exam done by the surgeon. But precisely the clinical examination can be sometimes mistaken as the variety of symptoms can mislead you easily. Wrong interpretation of signs often makes a surgeon remove a normal appendix or delay the removal of a perforated one. Further complications like peritonitis, infection and longer hospitalization period needed, appear either due to late presentation of the patients in hospital or because of doctor’s hesitation in establishing a diagnosis. Because of the dangerous sequels normal appendix removal must be avoided. In the last two decades, certain new scoring systems have improved the clinical performances in establishing diagnoses although the general results were manifold. According to studies, mistaken diagnosis by young doctors has decreased from 42% to 29%, and perforation cases dropped by 50%. The precision of medical conclusions increased though the new discovery more than due to the Alvarado scoring system that calculates the susceptibility of a person to develop appendicitis by several clinical references. The new technology using computers seemed to promise a most accurate diagnosis, but the normal appendectomy was still 15-30%. In a study using ultrasonography combined with the Alvarado score, no major benefits occurred compared to the unassisted clinical judgment. Both camps showed an about 12 percent of mistaken diagnosis owed to normal appendix or late surgery of a perforated one. Echography, even when performed by most experienced clinicians gives a rate of 5% false positive diagnoses. The question whether ultrasonography should be rarer used because of the cases that could have been better interpreted by clinical judgment, persists. The answer is dual, as ultrasonography sometimes proves itself vital when establishing a prompt diagnosis and thus reducing morbidity. Recent research showed no necessity of routine ultrasonography in patients with clear signs of appendix inflammation, as it can only mislead surgeons by showing a false negative image. No clinical benefits can be provided by performing an echo to all hospitalized patients. The importance of ultrasonography appears in uncertain cases and diagnoses, when the clinical judgment must be doubled by Para clinical technology. On the other hand a negative result from the Echography shouldn’t make a doctor send the patient home; clinical abilities are still the most important in diagnosing. |



