Inflammation of the appendix; main differential for an acute abdomen presentation in a child
Clinical presentation
Symptoms
The key presenting feature of appendicitis is abdominal pain - typically starts as central abdominal pain, that moves down to the right iliac fossa over time and eventually becomes localised in the RIF
Other classic features are:
Anorexia
Nausea and vomiting
Moderate temperature
Signs
Tenderness in McBurney’s point
Rosving’s sign - palpation of the left iliac fossa causes pain in the RIF
Guarding on abdominal palpation
Rebound tenderness - increased pain when quickly releasing pressure on the right iliac fossa
Percussion tenderness - pain and tenderness when percussing the abdomen
Painful movements (can't jump, feels every bump on the way to hospital) suggests peritonitis
Investigations
Usually clinical diagnosis based on presentation and raised inflammatory markers
US abdomen may find the inflamed appendix - good test in children if diagnosis uncertain