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Ultrasonography may complement clinical assessment in some patients
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
"Diagnosis
of appendicitis is usually easy"
thus wrote Sir Zachary Cope, but
with the rider: "but there are difficulties which need to be
discussed."1 The essential features of appendicitis are
well known to most clinicians; there is gradual onset of central abdominal pain, often followed by vomiting, with localisation of the
pain to the right iliac fossa. Localised tenderness and evidence of
peritoneal inflammation (guarding and percussion tenderness) make the
diagnosis probable. Clinical diagnosis is based on showing that
movement between adjacent inflamed peritoneal surfaces causes pain.2 Laboratory investigations usually contribute little and can be misleading. For example, the proportion of gangrenous and
perforated appendixes in patients with a normal white count is the same
as in those with an raised count.3 The diagnosis is
essentially a clinical one
or so it would seem.
The "difficulty" alluded to by Cope relates to our inability
to reliably diagnose appendicitis on clinical
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