Abstract

Acute neonatal appendicitis is a rare surgical emergency. Prognosis depends on early diagnosis and management. Case report. – A three and a half-month-old premature infant needed an urgent laparotomy because of an occlusive syndrome and sepsis with an inflammatory skin reaction. The per-operative diagnosis was suppurative acute appendicitis with local peritonitis, the appendix being strangulated into the inguinal hernia. Discussion. – Neonatal appendicitis represents 0.1% of all infantile appendicitis. Fifty percent of such cases occur in premature infants. Two clinical presentations exist, whose diagnosis is often made during surgery. The abdominal presentation (2/3 of the cases) can mimic necrotizing enterocolitis; the diagnosis is often late and evolution leads to diffuse peritonitis in the majority of the cases, while the mortality rate is higher than 50%. The intra-hernial presentation (1/3 of the cases), instead, is usually diagnosed and managed early due to the inguino-scrotal induration, while mortality rate is near zero. Conclusion. – The high frequency of inguinal hernia in premature infants should not mask the risk for intra-hernial appendicitis. Inguino-scrotal inflammation should evoke the diagnosis. Prognosis depends on early and urgent surgical management.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call