Abstract

Acute appendicitis is an acute inflammation of the appendix. It is a surgical emergency. It was a prospective, descriptive and analytical study, between September 2015 and October 2021, focusing on acute appendicitis. It is seen mainly in young subjects and in children, but not exclusively. Its diagnosis is essentially clinical. These were 124 patients operated on for acute appendicitis, with a male predominance: 78 men (62.90%) against 46 women (37.10%). The majority of patients came from Franceville (n = 66) 53.22%. The average age was 29.4 years (extremes 4 years and 54 years). The average admission time was +5.16 or -5.58 hours. Abdominal pain was the main reason for consultation. Physical signs were dominated by MAC Burney sign positivity in 91.1% of cases. Faced with certain doubtful cases, we requested an abdominal ultrasound. Phlegmonous appendicitis was the most frequent (n = 47) 45.96%. The ileocecal localization represented (n = 82) 66.12%, and other particularities in particular: Claudius AMIAND (n = 6), an appendicular duplication, appendicitis and pregnancy a case of crural appendicitis. Conventional appendectomy with burial by Mac Burney was the most used technique (n = 119) 95.42%. Anatomy pathology was rarely performed. The postoperative course was simple in 95.4% of cases. The average stay in inpatient surgery was 4.8 days. Isolated or combined antibiotic therapy was the rule. Postoperative follow-up at 1 month was systematic. Parietal suppuration was the main complication.

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