AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how common Enterobius vermicularis infestation is in patients who have undergone appendectomy and examines its connection to acute appendicitis.
  • Out of 1150 appendectomy cases reviewed over three years, only 31 (2.7%) were found to have E. v infestation; most of these cases involved children, and many presented no additional appendiceal issues.
  • The study concludes that while E. v infestation can be found incidentally in appendectomy specimens, there is no established relationship between E. v and acute appendicitis, signaling a need for further research and caution during surgical procedures to avoid unnecessary complications.

Article Abstract

Background: This study identifies the incidence of appendiceal Enterobius vermicularis (E.v) infestation in all the patients undergoing appendectomy and evaluates the relationship between E. v infestation of the appendix and the acute appendicitis.

Method: ology: All the routinely examined appendectomy specimens received in the pathology laboratory of a referral hospital over a three year period of time were reviewed for the existence of E. v. These cases were evaluated for clinico-laboratory characterization.

Results: Out of 1150 appendectomies for clinical acute appendicitis picture, 31 (2.7%) cases revealed E. v infestation. The age ranged from 6 to 42 years old but more than 80% of the E. v infected cases were children. Twenty four cases (77.4%) did not show any other appendiceal pathology, six cases showed lymphoid hyperplasia and only one case showed concomitant histological acute inflammatory process.

Conclusion: E. v infestation is an incidental finding during histopathology examination of appendectomy specimens for patients with clinical diagnosis of acute appendicitis, however there is no relation between the existence of E. v and occurrence of acute appendicitis which is the main indication for appendectomy, so further studies are recommended to reach out earlier diagnosis to eliminate the unnecessary surgical intervention. Also surgeons should consider E. v as a differential diagnosis when removing a normal looking appendix to take the necessary precautions for minimizing any chance of contamination and sending all the normal looking appendectomy specimens for histopathology examination.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7599363PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2020.10.057DOI Listing

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