Symptoms of posterior appendicitis
summary
Appendicitis is an inflammatory change caused by many factors. It is a common surgical disease. The most common disease is young people, and the male is more than the female. Clinically, acute appendicitis is more common in all ages and pregnant women. Chronic appendicitis is rare. Symptoms of posterior appendicitis? Next, I'd like to share my views with you.
Symptoms of posterior appendicitis
Abdominal pain is typical of acute appendicitis. At the beginning, there is pain in the middle and upper abdomen or around the umbilicus. A few hours later, the pain is transferred and fixed in the right lower abdomen. When the inflammation spread to the serosa and parietal peritoneum, the pain was fixed in the right lower abdomen, and the pain in the original middle upper abdomen or periumbilical was alleviated or disappeared. Therefore, no typical history of metastatic right lower abdominal pain can not exclude acute appendicitis.
Simple appendicitis often presents paroxysmal or persistent distending pain and dull pain. Persistent severe pain often indicates suppurative or gangrenous appendicitis. Persistent severe pain affects the middle and lower abdomen or both sides of the lower abdomen, which is often a sign of gangrene and perforation of the appendix.
Tenderness and rebound pain appendiceal tenderness point is usually located in Mais point, that is, the junction of the right anterior superior iliac spine and the umbilical cord. Rebound pain, also known as Blumberg syndrome, is a manifestation of inflammatory stimulation of parietal peritoneum. Obese patients or patients with posterior cecal appendicitis, tenderness may be lighter, but there is obvious rebound pain.
matters needing attention
Don't overeat: hungry a full meal, irregular diet, gastrointestinal filling and emptying will lose normality; And overeating, can suddenly increase the gastrointestinal burden, increase the mechanical stimulation of food. This will lead to normal intestinal peristalsis changes, dysfunction.