Clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in Central Nigeria

Background: Acute appendicitis is a disease of the young presenting in children and early adolescents although no age group is exempt. It is the most common cause of acute surgical abdomen worldwide. This clinicopathological study aims to determine the various lesions of the surgically removed appen...

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Main Author: Babatunde M. Duduyemi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2015-09-01
Series:Alexandria Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2090506814000839
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spelling doaj-7568ca070b7445768cd15ec052123dac2021-01-02T05:01:37ZengTaylor & Francis GroupAlexandria Journal of Medicine2090-50682015-09-0151320721110.1016/j.ajme.2014.08.003Clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in Central NigeriaBabatunde M. DuduyemiBackground: Acute appendicitis is a disease of the young presenting in children and early adolescents although no age group is exempt. It is the most common cause of acute surgical abdomen worldwide. This clinicopathological study aims to determine the various lesions of the surgically removed appendix in our centre and if any, changing trend in this lesion in our environment. Method: A retrospective study was undertaken to review the histopathology reports of all appendicectomy specimens submitted to the Department of Pathology of the Asokoro District Hospital, Abuja; Nigeria from November 2009 to October 2012 Patient’s biodata, clinical signs and symptoms were extracted from the request form. Result: A total of 293 appendices were received during the 3-year study period constituting about 10% of total specimens. The male to female ratio was 1:1.3 with a mean age of 26.33 ± 11.39 years. Acute appendicitis was found in 81.2% of our cases while other lesions constitute 14.7% and negative appendectomy occurred in 4.1% of the cases. No mortality was recorded. Conclusion: The findings in this study compared favourably with those of our environment and in the developed world although acute appendicitis in this study showed slight female preponderance.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2090506814000839Acute abdomenAppendixAppendicectomyHistology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Babatunde M. Duduyemi
spellingShingle Babatunde M. Duduyemi
Clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in Central Nigeria
Alexandria Journal of Medicine
Acute abdomen
Appendix
Appendicectomy
Histology
author_facet Babatunde M. Duduyemi
author_sort Babatunde M. Duduyemi
title Clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in Central Nigeria
title_short Clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in Central Nigeria
title_full Clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in Central Nigeria
title_fullStr Clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in Central Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in Central Nigeria
title_sort clinicopathological review of surgically removed appendix in central nigeria
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Alexandria Journal of Medicine
issn 2090-5068
publishDate 2015-09-01
description Background: Acute appendicitis is a disease of the young presenting in children and early adolescents although no age group is exempt. It is the most common cause of acute surgical abdomen worldwide. This clinicopathological study aims to determine the various lesions of the surgically removed appendix in our centre and if any, changing trend in this lesion in our environment. Method: A retrospective study was undertaken to review the histopathology reports of all appendicectomy specimens submitted to the Department of Pathology of the Asokoro District Hospital, Abuja; Nigeria from November 2009 to October 2012 Patient’s biodata, clinical signs and symptoms were extracted from the request form. Result: A total of 293 appendices were received during the 3-year study period constituting about 10% of total specimens. The male to female ratio was 1:1.3 with a mean age of 26.33 ± 11.39 years. Acute appendicitis was found in 81.2% of our cases while other lesions constitute 14.7% and negative appendectomy occurred in 4.1% of the cases. No mortality was recorded. Conclusion: The findings in this study compared favourably with those of our environment and in the developed world although acute appendicitis in this study showed slight female preponderance.
topic Acute abdomen
Appendix
Appendicectomy
Histology
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2090506814000839
work_keys_str_mv AT babatundemduduyemi clinicopathologicalreviewofsurgicallyremovedappendixincentralnigeria
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