http://www.abdopain.com/appendicitis-in-pregnancy.html

APPENDICITIS IN PREGNANCY
Appendicitis in pregnancy is a relatively common phenomenon. Rates of 
between 1 in every 1000 to 1 in 2000 pregnancy have been reported.

Pregnant mothers thus do develop appendicitis too. Not uncommonly, attending 
physicians and patients develop a lot of anxiety about the occurrence of 
appendicitis during pregnancy and as to what is the best way to manage this 
condition.

Because of the presence of pregnancy, there is usually a delay in diagnosis, 
as most of the complaints are blamed on the pregnancy.
A high index of suspicion, prompt diagnosis and surgical removal of the 
appendix even despite pregnancy is the appropriate management of 
appendicitis in the pregnant.
Undiagnosed appendicitis in pregnancy is a potentially fatal surgical 
emergency. Up to 4 in 100 women with ruptured appendicitis in pregnancy will 
die, and 1 in 3 babies may be lost due to delay in diagnosis and treatment 
of appendicitis during pregnancy.
After the 6th month of pregnancy, appendicitis during pregnancy could lead 
to premature labour in up to 1 in every 2 women with this condition.


DIAGNOSIS OF APPENDICITIS IN PREGNANCY


The diagnosis of appendicitis during pregnancy poses difficulties due to the 
altered state of the body caused by pregnancy.
Features such as nausea and vomiting may be thought to be those normally 
seen with pregnancy, and abdominal pain may be thought to be due to false 
labour or Braxton Hicks contractions .
Even laboratory findings of elevated white blood cells in acute appendicitis 
occurs in normal pregnancy.
Diagnosis in early pregnancy is not much of a problem as the signs and 
symptoms of appendicitis here is same in the non-pregnant woman.
As the uterus gets bigger, it pushes the appendix upwards towards the right 
kidney. This causes the pain expected down in the lower right abdomen to be 
in the flank or even on the back.
Thus the patient may be suspected of having right kidney infection, instead 
of appendicitis. Any pregnant woman with pain on the right side of the 
abdomen should therefore be scanned for a possible appendicitis.
Frequently, urinary tract infection which is also common in pregnancy could 
actually occur alone or in co-existence with appendicitis in pregnancy.
Undiagnosed appendicitis in pregnancy could lead to dire consequences. Up to 
1 in 3 cases (30%) of ruptured undiagnosed appendicitis lead to loss and 
death of the baby.


TO OPERATE OR NOT TO IN APPENDICITIS DURING PREGNANCY ?

Once there is suspicion of appendicitis, aggressive evaluation of the 
possibility is instituted, and operation advised, as may be deemed fit by 
the attending gynaecologist and surgeon.
The current believe is that it is better for a normal appendix to be removed 
during an operation for suspected appendicitis in pregnancy than to allow 
complications occur because of not operating.
It is considered acceptable, that up to one in three (up to 35%) expectant 
mothers who undergo surgical operation for appendicitis may turn out to have 
a normal appendix. Why this figure is quite high compared to what is 
acceptable in the normal population (15% in the non-pregnant population), 
the grave consequences of delayed surgery is not an option (Mostafa et al 
2006).
The most popular study done in this regard was by Horowitz and his 
colleagues. They reported an unfortunate outcome which occurred due to 
delays in surgical intervention once the diagnosis of appendicitis in 
pregnancy in 12 women was made.
Surgery was delayed in 7 of these pregnant women with appendicitis for 24 
hours.
The result: 6 of the 7 women developed ruptured appendix within just 24 
hours, leading to the death of two of the babies, the death of one of the 
mothers, and one premature delivery!
What a tragic loss of 3 lives from unnecessary delay in operating a pregnant 
woman with appendicitis (Horowitz et al, 1985 - see the reference quoted 
below for full details).
Outcome is usually good where perforation has not occurred. Some women could 
go into premature labour.

To buttress this fact, is a study conducted by S. Mahmoodian in 1992. He 
reviewed 713 women in whom a diagnosis of appendicitis during pregnancy was 
made. A quarter of these patients had ruptured appendicitis. 5 of the 
mothers died as a result of the ruptured appendicitis.
With surgery, he demonstrated that there is about 20 in 100 chance of death 
during operation in a woman with perforated or ruptured appendicitis in 
pregnancy, compared with only 4 in a 100 chances of death in un-perforated 
or non-ruptured appendicitis in pregnancy.
The verdict: prompt surgical operation in women suspected to have 
appendicitis during pregnancy is key to saving both mother and baby.
With dramatic improvements in medical technology over the last 10 years, 
surgical operations are even much more safer in both groups, especially with 
laparoscopic or keyhole surgery.
Where pregnancy is still at the early stage, some have given progesterone or 
isoxuprine to protect and preserve the pregnancy.
There should be minimal handling of the uterus during the operation.
So, if you are pregnant and have signs and symptoms of appendicitis, go to 
your doctor immediately who would attempt to verify if you are having 
appendicitis in pregnancy.
Once confirmed, having an operation to remove the diseased appendix is a 
wise thing to do if that is what your doctor also advices.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Vici .
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, June 14, 2010 2:38 PM
Subject: [parentsguide] Help, plz.. Lagi Hamil kena usus buntu?



Halo bunda...

Aku mohon infonya ya barangkali ada yg pernah ngalami atau tau 
informasinya...
Saat ini saya lagi hamil anak ke-3 dengan usia kehamilan 8 minggu (2 
bulan)..

Waktu hamil anak 1 dan 2, semua baik2 saja dan gak ngidam apa2.
Tapi di kehamilan yg ke-3 ini saya mengalami (maaf) mual & muntah yg luar 
biasa (sehari bisa 10x muntah2)..
Oleh dokter kandungan udah diberi obat anti mual & muntah, tp gak pengaruh 
sama sekali.
Tapi krn kt dokter gak apa, saya gak trlalu khawatir & tetap memperhatikan 
asupan vitamin/gizi yg masuk.

Persoalannya, 2 minggu belakangan ini perut kanan bawah terasa sakit luar 
biasa.
setelah konsul ke dokter kandungan, dinyatakan usus buntu dan diminta utk 
konsul lg ke dokter bedah. Hasilnya positif usus buntu.
Utk skrg ini masih diupayakan lewat obat2an utk mengurangi rasa sakit, tp 
klo gak ada perubahan dlm 2 minggu ke depan, baru diambil tindakan lbh 
lanjut.

Waktu saya tanya apakah tindakan lebih lanjut itu operasi, dokternya belum 
mau menjawab, cuma bilang: "kita lihat perkembangannya aja dl ya, bu!"

Duuh... saya jd khawatir bngt d..
Kira2 klo harus dioperasi apakah ada efek samping trhadap ibunya atau 
bayinya?
saya udah coba browsing di internet tp belum menemukan jawabannya.

Mohon bantuannya barangkali bunda ada yg mengetahui informasi tentang hal 
tersebut?

Terima kasih.

-Bunda Lourdes-





 

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