Can chronic appendicitis affect defecation

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

Recently, my colleagues have been saying that they have stomachache. Every time they go to work, they have no pain. It's useless to take medicine. They have lost a lot of weight. Later, they went to have an examination and said it was appendicitis. They had to have an operation. Now they have a rest at home. Let's talk about whether chronic appendicitis will affect the stool.

Can chronic appendicitis affect defecation

First: Although the anatomical distance between the stomach and the appendix is very long, there is no direct causal relationship between gastritis and appendicitis, but gastritis can lead to the decline of resistance, so it can affect appendicitis to a certain extent. Secondly, chronic appendicitis in the development process will be repeated or acute attack, can be early surgical treatment.

Second, the stool characteristics can be changed in acute attack of chronic appendicitis, but there is no obvious specific change in the stool of patients with chronic appendicitis. Therefore, the diagnosis of chronic appendicitis can not be based on the change of stool characteristics. If you want to know whether there is chronic appendicitis, you can check barium enema or right lower abdomen color Doppler ultrasound.

Third: appendicitis refers to appendicitis due to a variety of factors and the formation of inflammatory changes, abdominal surgical diseases. Guidance: simple acute appendicitis using non-surgical treatment, most patients can be cured, but left with chronic inflammation or narrow lumen is easy to relapse, so once the diagnosis of acute appendicitis is clear, emergency surgery should still be performed to remove the diseased appendix.

matters needing attention

Patients with chronic appendicitis should not abuse some narcotic analgesics by themselves. They mainly eat liquid food in their diet, so as to avoid the inflammation that may increase in intestinal peristalsis and help the intestines and stomach get relief, which is conducive to the disease.