Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4282242 The American Journal of Surgery 2006 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundWe sought to develop a clinical predictive model for acute appendicitis and contrast it with current clinical practice.MethodsA prospective observational study of patients presenting with signs or symptoms consistent with acute appendicitis. Random-partition modeling was used to develop an appendicitis likelihood model (ALM).ResultsFour hundred thirty-nine patients were enrolled, 101 with appendicitis, and 338 with other diagnoses. The ALM classified patients as “low likelihood” if they had a white blood cell count <9,500 and either no right lower–quadrant tenderness or a neutrophil count <54%. Patients were classified as “high likelihood” if they had a white blood cell count >13,000 with rebound tenderness or both voluntary guarding and neutrophil count >82%. The ALM outperformed actual clinical practice with regard to “missed” appendicitis, negative laparotomies, and total number of imaging studies.ConclusionThe ALM may permit more judicious use of advanced radiographic imaging with lower nontherapuetic laparotomy rates.

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