Emergency Right Hemicolectomy for Pericecal Masses Mimicking Acute Appendicitis: Surgeon’s Fearful Dilemma


Abstract views: 95 / PDF downloads: 60

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54614/eurjther.2021.0090

Keywords:

Appendicitis, cancer, hemicolectomy, pericecal mass

Abstract

Objective: Unexpected conglomerated pericecal masses of uncertain etiology encountered in emergency surgery may be indistinguishable, and proper operative strategic management of these cases is a dilemma for digestive system surgeons. Starting from this point, we decided to analyze the patients in whom a right hemicolectomy was performed for the pericecal mass during an appendectomy in our regional hospital.

Methods: Over 8 years between March 2011 and May 2019, 4783 patients who lived in the eastern Mediterranean area underwent emergency surgery for clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis, and a right hemicolectomy for inflammatory pericecal mass was performed in 44 patients included in this study. Patient records were reviewed for sex, age, preoperative symptoms, preoperative imaging, operation findings, preoperative Complete Blood Count (CBC) and biochemical findings, pathology reports, length of hospital stay, mortality, and any complications encountered.

Results: The histopathological examination revealed that 5 of 44 (11.4%) patients had malignancy while 27 of 44 patients (88.6%) had benign pathologies. All of the malignancies were adenocarcinoma. According to age, there was a statistically significant difference between patients with and without malignancy (P < .05).

Conclusion: The pericecal mass in emergency surgery is still a diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma. Hidden appendiceal neoplasm in acute appendicitis is rare but its incidence is higher in patients presenting appendiceal inflammatory mass. On the other hand, most unexpected inflammatory pericecal masses are due to benign pathologies. The choice of the surgical procedure depends on the surgeon’s and institute’s experience.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

Bhangu A, Søreide K, Di Saverio S, Assarsson JH, Drake FT. Acute appendicitis: modern understanding of pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management. Lancet. 2015;386(10000):1278-1287.

AIHW. Australian Hospital Statistics 2010-2011. Canberra: Australian Institute of Health and Welfare; 2012.

Gandy RC, Wang F. Should the non-operative management of appendicitis be the new standard of care? ANZ J Surg. 2016;86(4):228-231.

Lee JH, Park YS, Choi JS. The epidemiology of appendicitis and appendectomy in South Korea: national registry data. J Epidemiol. 2010;20(2):97-105.

Ohene-Yeboah M, Abantanga FA. Incidence of acute appendicitis in Kumasi, Ghana. West Afr J Med. 2009;28(2):122-125.

Andersson RE, Petzold MG. Nonsurgical treatment of appendiceal abscess or phlegmon: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Ann Surg. 2007;246(5):741-748.

Patel NB, Wenzke DR. Evaluating the patient with right lower quadrant pain. Radiol Clin North Am. 2015;53(6):1159-1170.

Guven H, Koc B, Saglam F, Bayram IA, Adas G. Emergency right hemicolectomy for inflammatory cecal masses mimicking acute appendicitis. World J Emerg Surg. 2014;9(1):7.

Ahmed I, Deakin D, Parsons SL. Appendix mass: do we know how to treat it? Ann R Coll Surg Engl. 2005;87(3):191-195.

Kobayashi H, Miyata H, Gotoh M, et al. Risk model for right hemicolectomy based on 19,070 Japanese patients in the National Clinical Database. J Gastroenterol. 2014;49(6):1047-1055.

Hsu TC. Comparison of one-stage resection and anastomosis of acute complete obstruction of left and right colon. Am J Surg. 2005;189(4):384-387.

Teixeira FJR, Couto Netto SDD, Akaishi EH, Utiyama EM, Menegozzo CAM, Rocha MC. Acute appendicitis, inflammatory appendiceal mass and the risk of a hidden malignant tumor: a systematic review of the literature. World J Emerg Surg. 2017;12:12.

Yamada T, Endo H, Hasegawa H, et al. Risk of emergency surgery for complicated appendicitis: Japanese nationwide study. Ann Gastroenterol Surg. 2021;5(2):236-242.

Luiz do Nascimento Junior P, Teixeira Brandt C, Petroianu A. Differences between inflamed and non-inflamed appendices diagnosed as acute appendicitis. Ann Med Surg (Lond). 2021;62:135-139.

Bolmers MDM, de Jonge J, van Rossem CC, van Geloven AAW, Bemelman WA, Snapshot Appendicitis Collaborative Study group. Appendicular neoplasms and consequences in patients undergoing surgery for suspected acute appendicitis. Int J Colorectal Dis 2020;35(11):2065-2071.

Downloads

Published

2022-06-21

How to Cite

Turan, Ümit, Kılavuz, H., & Irkorucu, O. (2022). Emergency Right Hemicolectomy for Pericecal Masses Mimicking Acute Appendicitis: Surgeon’s Fearful Dilemma. European Journal of Therapeutics, 28(2), 142–145. https://doi.org/10.54614/eurjther.2021.0090

Issue

Section

Original Articles