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Ultrasonography may complement clinical assessment in some patients
"Diagnosis
of appendicitis is usually easy" The "difficulty" alluded to by Cope relates to our inability
to reliably diagnose appendicitis on clinical grounds. The vagaries of
presentation and the variability of signs are such that even the most
experienced surgeons may remove normal appendixes or "sit on"
those that have perforated. The sequelae of delayed diagnosis may
result from late presentation by the patient but are sometimes due to
the initial failure of the clinician to make the correct diagnosis.4 The sequelae of delayed treatment include a
higher incidence of postoperative sepsis and longer hospital stay.
Against this, it is generally accepted that unnecessary surgery should be avoided, and this aspect of care is usually measured by the proportion of appendixes that are normal on histology. The Australian Council of Healthcare Standards has chosen this criterion as one of its
clinical indicators of outcome in appendicitis.5
Can we improve our clinical performance? Over the years various
clinical scoring systems (some computer assisted) have been used,
and, although their clinical benefit has varied, most reports describe
some improvement in clinical performance with their use Can graded compression ultrasonography improve our diagnostic accuracy?
In the study reported in this issue of the BMJ (p 919) the
use of a diagnostic protocol incorporating both the Alvarado score and
graded compression ultrasonography failed to produce better outcomes
than unaided clinical diagnosis.7a The proportion of
patients in each group who had an adverse outcome (either a non-therapeutic operation or delayed treatment in patients with appendiceal perforation) was nearly identical Given the frequency of both false positives and false negatives with
ultrasonography, should it be allowed to override clinical judgment?
Could it cause too many patients to be subjected to non-therapeutic
operations (arguably unnecessary surgery) where clinical judgment might
have avoided this, or could it have resulted in surgery where
observation alone would have led to resolution of symptoms? In
contrast, a positive result on graded compression ultrasonography may
enable earlier operation in some patients with equivocal clinical signs
and facilitate prompt and appropriate surgical intervention, thus
reducing morbidity.
Current evidence, mostly from series of patients and retrospective
studies, suggests there is probably no role for ultrasonography where
clinical evidence of appendicitis is convincing, given the known false
negative rate of graded compression ultrasonography and the knowledge
that it may delay appropriate surgery.9 Moreover, the low
false positive rate (6%) in clinically obvious cases of appendicitis
does not warrant routine ultrasonography.10 One prospective observational multicentre study of 2280 patients found no clinical benefit when routine ultrasonography was performed in all
patients.11
The main role for ultrasonography may be for the equivocal case, where
a combination of repeated clinical assessment and graded compression
ultrasonography may provide the additional information required to
determine whether surgery is necessary.12 Finally, we
should heed the advice offered by the authors in this issue that
patients should not be sent home after negative results on ultrasonography unless there are also clinical grounds for their discharge. The hands of clinicians are not yet superfluous.
Christchurch Hospital, Christchurch, New Zealand
spencerb{at}chhlth.govt.nz
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.
at least for
the duration of the study. The greatest beneficiaries may be junior
staff, whose diagnostic accuracy increases from 58 % to
71%.6 In some reports perforation rates have dropped by
50% (in one study from 27% to 12.5%), but in others no
reduction has been shown.
6 7
A prospective study of
118 children found that current clinical practice was more accurate
than the modified Alvarado score (that measures the likelihood of
appendicitis by producing a score based on various clinical and other
parameters) in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis.8
The main value of computer aided diagnosis may be as an ongoing
stimulus to good clinical practice.
6 7
Despite
initial optimism, it has become apparent that in most units the normal
appendix rate remains 15-30%.
about 12%. Graded compression ultrasonography performed by experienced ultrasonographers still produced a 5% false negative result.
| 1. | Cope Z. The early diagnosis of the acute abdomen. 14th ed. London: Oxford University Press, 1972. |
| 2. | Hutson JM, Beasley SW. The surgical examination of children. In: Oxford: Heinemann Medical, 1988. |
| 3. | Coleman C, Thompson JE, Bennion RS, Schmit PJ. White blood cell count is a poor predictor of severity of disease in the diagnosis of appendicitis. Am Surg 1998; 64: 983-985[Medline]. |
| 4. | Bergeron E, Richer B, Gharib R, Giard A. Appendicitis is a place for clinical judgement. Am J Surg 1999; 177: 460-462[Medline] |
| 5. | Australian Council of Healthcare Standards Care Evaluation Program. Surgical Indicators: Clinical indicators in paediatric surgery. Version 1 Sydney: ACHS, 1999. |
| 6. | McAdam WA, Brock BM, Armitage T, Davenport P, Chan M, de Dombal FT. Twelve years' experience of computer-aided diagnosis in a district general hospital. Ann R Coll Surg 1990; 72: 140-146. |
| 7. | Adams ID, Chan M, Clifford PC, Cooke WM, Dallos V, de Dombal FT, et al. Computer aided diagnosis of acute abdominal pain: a multicentre study. BMJ 1986; 293: 800-804. |
| 7a. |
Douglas CD, Macpherson NE, Davidson PM, Gani JS.
Randomised controlled trial of ultrasonography in diagnosis of acute appendicitis, incorporating the Alvarado score.
BMJ
2000;
321:
919-922 |
| 8. | Macklin CP, Radcliffe JS, Merei JM, Stringer MD. A prospective evaluation of the modified Alvarado score for acute appendicitis in children. Ann R Coll Surg 1997; 79: 203-205. |
| 9. | Roosevelt GE, Reynolds SL. Does the use of ultrasonography improve the outcome of children with appendicitis? Acad Emerg Med 1998; 5: 1071-1075[Medline]. |
| 10. | Lessin MS, Chan M, Catallozzi M, Gilchrist MF, Richards C, Manera L, et al. Selective use of ultrasonography for acute appendicitis in children. Am J Surg 1999; 177: 193-196[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 11. | Franke C, Bohner H, Yang Q, Ohmann C, Roher HD. Ultrasonography for diagnosis of acute appendicitis: results of a prospective multicenter trial. Acute abdominal pain study group. World J Surg 1999; 23: 141-146[CrossRef][Medline]. |
| 12. | Rice HE, Arbesman M, Martin DJ, Brown RL, Gollin G, Gilbert JC, et al. Does early ultrasonography affect management of pediatric appendicitis? A prospective analysis. J Pediatr Surg 1999; 34: 754-758[CrossRef][Medline]. |
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Israeli students are refusing to perform intimate examinations on anaesthetised women without their informed consent.