The Record (Troy, NY)

Why remove the appendix?

- Anthony Komaroff Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. To send questions, go to AskDoctorK.com, or write: Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

DEAR DOCTOR K>> Why do doctors remove the appendix when someone has appendicit­is? Don’t we need this organ?

DEAR READER>> Appendicit­is is an inflammati­on of the appendix. This small, fingerlike tube hangs from the lower right side of the large intestine. It usually becomes inflamed because of an infection or blockage. The condition is quite common; it affects one in every 500 people in the United States each year. (I’ve put an illustrati­on of an inflamed appendix on my website, AskDoctorK.com.)

An appendicit­is attack usually begins with abdominal pain that starts just above the navel and moves to the lower right side of the abdomen. Many people also experience loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting and lowgrade fever. Other symptoms can include abdominal swelling, pain when the right side of the abdomen is touched and inability to pass gas.

Once a person is diagnosed with appendicit­is (or even strongly suspected of having it), prompt surgery usually is performed.

Surgical removal of the appendix is called “appendecto­my,” and it has been the go-to treatment for appendicit­is since the late 1800s. It is the most common reason for emergency abdominal surgery in the U.S. That’s true in children as well as adults.

In the 1990s, surgeons began to perform the procedure with an instrument called a laparoscop­e. This is a flexible tube with a light, video camera, and cutting instrument­s at the end of it. The instrument allows the surgeon to see inside the abdomen, find the inflamed appendix, cut it free and pull it out of the body.

Removing the appendix with a laparoscop­e allows for several smaller cuts in the wall of the abdomen. This contrasts with the traditiona­l surgical approach, which involves one large incision. Laparoscop­ic surgery has led to fewer complicati­ons, and the average hospital stay is shorter and recovery is quicker compared to traditiona­l surgery.

Why is appendecto­my so widely used? For one thing, if untreated, an infected appendix can burst. A potentiall­y deadly infection can spread throughout the abdomen and into the bloodstrea­m, requiring complicate­d emergency surgery. Prompt removal of the appendix before it bursts helps avoid this dangerous situation.

Also, we don’t know what the appendix does — or if it does anything at all. Removing it has no negative effects on a person’s health. In fact, sometimes when surgeons have to perform abdominal surgery for other reasons (like an inflamed gallbladde­r), they remove a healthy appendix while they’re at it. That eliminates the possibilit­y of appendicit­is developing in the future.

Everyone who has surgery also receives antibiotic­s.

These drugs treat the infection within the appendix, and they reduce the risk of widespread infection if the appendix has already burst as the surgeons are preparing to operate.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States