Retrospective Comparison Between AirSeal® and Standard Insufflation in Appendicular Peritonitis...
Peritonitis; AcuteAppendicitis2 moreThe AirSeal System Valve-less Trocar is known to decrease postoperative pain, consumption of analgesics, operating time, and length of stay in adults during robotic and laparoscopic procedures. The investigators would like to know if these allegations also apply to children.
A Novel Appendicitis TriMOdal Prediction Score (ATMOS) for Acute Appendicitis in Pregnancy: a Retrospective...
Appendicitis in PregnancyAcute appendicitis (AA) is a disease of younger age, but it occurs in 1 out of 500-2000 pregnancies. The current treatment of choice for AA in pregnancy is surgical. Even with standard clinical examination, serum inflammatory markers, and transabdominal ultrasound, the decision on surgical treatment of acute appendicitis (AA) and the rate of negative appendectomy in pregnancy are still unsatisfactory. There are several scoring systems (Alvarado, Tzanakis) that help making decision on operating more easier, however their specificity is either high with low sensitivity, or the other way around. In addition, all scores are based on adult non-pregnant population. We are making an observational study to develop a scoring system that would include ultrasonic imaging with clinical-biochemical parameters while not compromising sensitivity and specificity.
Value of Ultrasound and Computed Tomography in the Diagnosis of Acute Appendicitis With Histopathology...
Appendicitis AcuteThis study is a retrospective evaluation of all patients treated surgically for appendicitis over a period of 3 years at the Sint- Andries Hospital, Tielt. Belgium. The goal is to evaluate the value of ultrasound (US), computed tomography (CT) and laboratory testing in diagnosing acute appendicitis and to look for the possible impact on the treatment.
CT Dose Simulation Study for Appendicitis
AppendicitisThe study will explore CT radiation dose as low as reasonably achievable in diagnosing acute appendicitis, by using of dose simulation technique and iterative reconstruction.
Perioperative Pain Management of Pediatric Appendectomy Patients
AppendicitisAcute appendicitis is the most common illness that brings pediatric patients to the hospital for surgical treatment. Abdominal pain is the symptom because of which the patients go to the hospital. Some patients have severe pain and need analgesics before the final diagnosis and before surgery. After surgery most patient experience pain and at least 80 % of the patients need postoperative pain medication. For two decades there has been a clinical guideline for pain management in Kuopio University Hospital (KUH). The investigators aim was to evaluate how well the pain management for pediatric patient works in clinical practice.
The Hospital Volume Relationship in Appendicectomy Outcomes
AppendicitisBackground Appendicitis is a common condition which represents a significant resource burden for the Scottish National Health Service (NHS). It is unknown whether there are significant differences in Scottish appendicectomy (appendectomy) outcomes which may be explained by hospital volume. In many studies, hospital procedural volume has been shown to be predictive of surgical outcomes. Aims The aim of this study is to compare appendicectomy outcomes in Scotland as they vary by hospital procedural volume. Methods This research study is a retrospective observational enquiry which will utilise administrative data from the Information Services Division (ISD) of NHS National Services Scotland. Patient episodes will be identified by a procedure codes for appendicectomy. A 10 year period will be studied, from January 2001 to December 2010. Primary outcome measures will be risk-adjusted 30 day/inpatient mortality, 30 day readmission rate, 30 day re-operation rate, length of stay and negative appendicectomy rate.
A Comparison of Appendicectomy Outcomes in Children Between Paediatric and General Surgical Centres...
AppendicitisIntroduction Appendicectomy (or appendectomy in US usage) is the single most commonly performed emergency surgical operation performed on British children. Previous investigation of outcomes following appendicectomy has suggested that specialist surgeons and high volume centres have fewer "negative" appendicectomies (i.e. the appendix found to be non-diseased), although there has not been consistent association found between hospital type or surgeon experience and complication rate or admission rate. Scotland has 3 dedicated children's surgery centres but straightforward children's surgery such as appendicectomy is also carried out in the country's general surgical centres. Appendicectomy outcome variations have not been explored in the Scottish National Health Service (NHS). Aim This study will compare appendicectomy outcomes in children between Scotland's specialist paediatric centres and general surgical centres. Methods This is a retrospective study of all appendicectomies performed in Scotland during the period from 1st January 2001 - 31st December 2010, on children aged 2 - 12 years old. It will use routinely collected administrative data from the Information Services Division of NHS National Services Scotland. The study will compare risk-adjusted 30 day/in-patient mortality, 30 day re-admission rate, 30 day re-operation rate, post-operative length of stay and negative appendicectomy rates.
A Trial on Laparoscopic Appendectomy Versus Single Port Appendectomy
Acute AppendicitisThe aim of this study is to compare patients who undergone single-port access laparoscopic appendectomy to those who underwent conventional three-port laparoscopic appendectomy (TPLA) in a prospective randomized trial
The Performance of the APPY1 Test in the Evaluation of Possible Acute Appendicitis
Acute AppendicitisThis study will consist of a brief interaction with the subject or parent or guardian to obtain consent, collect a blood sample, medical history, and physical examination of those who meet the inclusion criteria. The blood sample will be tested for the WBC value, as well as processed into plasma in order to compute the APPY1 Test result, which is based on a combination of the WBC value and the plasma MRP 8/14 and CRP concentrations received from the APPY1 Test cassette. There will be a 2-week (14 days +/- 3) follow-up telephone call for those subjects that were discharged from the ED without an appendectomy or diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Use of the APPY1 Test to help identify low risk patients could significantly reduce the use of CT scans in diagnosis of AA, thereby reducing the exposure to ionizing radiation in children, adolescents, and young adults.
TICAP - Titanium Clips for Appendiceal Stump Closure
AppendicitisLaparoscopic appendectomy is progressively accepted as the treatment of choice for acute appendicitis. Although the surgical technique of laparoscopic appendectomy has been well established, some controversy exists regarding the closure of the appendiceal stump. The available methods for stump closure are currently: pre-knotted loops (Roeder Loops or Endoloop, linear stapler and polymeric clips. A new device is a the DS Titanium Ligation Clip. The design of the DS-Clip is characterized by two parallel shanks. The aim of this study is to collect data of a large number of patients treated with the product in real-life clinical routine.