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AJR 2004; 182:1203-1205
© American Roentgen Ray Society


Case Report

CT Identification of Abscesses After Dropped Appendicoliths During Laparoscopic Appendectomy

Newrhee Kim1, William P. Reed, Jr.2, Maher A. Abbas3 and Douglas S. Katz1

1 Department of Radiology, Winthrop-University Hospital, 259 First St., Mineola, NY, 11501.
2 Department of Surgery, Winthrop-University Hospital, Mineola, NY 11501.
3 Department of Surgery, Kaiser Permanente, 4760 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90027.

Received August 19, 2003; accepted after revision September 23, 2003.

 
Address correspondence to D. S. Katz (dsk2928{at}pol.net).


Introduction
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
Appendicitis is a common disorder that affects approximately 7% of the United States population during their lifetime [1]. Urgent appendectomy remains the treatment of choice for most patients with acute appendicitis, and laparoscopic appendectomy has been increasingly used as the surgical approach [2]. Reports have emerged [3, 4] of gallstones that were retained or "dropped" at laparoscopy and that acted as nidi of infection with subsequent abscess formation in cases of acute cholecystitis, another common surgical condition for which laparoscopy has become the standard surgical procedure. Such a complication is relatively rare but is now well recognized, and the corresponding CT findings have also been reported [4]. Dropped appendicoliths at open (i.e., conventional) appendectomy [5] or at laparoscopic appendectomy [6, 7] with associated postoperative abscess have rarely been reported in the surgical literature. However, the CT finding of an abscess associated with a dropped appendicolith would be diagnostic if the appendicolith was calcified enough to be identified on a preoperative CT examination. We report the case of a patient who developed a pelvic abscess caused by appendicoliths that were accidentally dropped in the pelvis during laparoscopic appendectomy.


Case Report
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Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
A 38-year-old previously healthy man presented to our emergency department complaining of a 2-day history of colicky abdominal pain, fever, chills, nausea, vomiting, and increasing abdominal girth. Findings of physical examination and laboratory studies were consistent with a diagnosis of appendicitis. CT of the abdomen and pelvis performed using oral and IV contrast media confirmed acute appendicitis. Two appendicoliths were identified in the lumen of the appendix near its base (Fig. 1A). The patient then underwent laparoscopic appendectomy, and a perforated appendix was identified and removed. The mid portion of the appendix was gangrenous, with a fecalith protruding through it, but the operating surgeon believed that the appendix was removed in its entirety, including the appendicoliths. The patient, afebrile and with normal WBC, was discharged from the hospital after 5 days.



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Fig. 1A. 38-year-old man with acute appendicitis. Contrast-enhanced CT scan of pelvis shows two appendicoliths (arrows) near base of appendix, which is enlarged.

 

The patient returned approximately 17 days later complaining of lower abdominal pain, fever, and dysuria. Findings of physical examination and laboratory studies suggested an infection. A new CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis showed a 5-cm abscess in the cul-de-sac containing two calcifications consistent with dropped appendicoliths (Figs. 1B and 1C) and a left-sided pelvic abscess (not shown).



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Fig. 1B. 38-year-old man with acute appendicitis. Contrast-enhanced CT scan of pelvis obtained 17 days after appendectomy shows expected minimal postoperative changes around appendectomy clips near cecum (arrow).

 


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Fig. 1C. 38-year-old man with acute appendicitis. Contrast-enhanced CT scan of pelvis obtained at lower level than seen in B shows collection with wall enhancement (large arrows) consistent with abscesses and containing two calcifications representing "dropped" appendicoliths (small arrows) in more posterior collection.

 

The patient was admitted, hydrated, and placed on IV antibiotics. A laparoscopically guided drainage of the abscess was performed. The surgery revealed erythema of the outer walls of the sigmoid colon and bladder, and the abscesses seen on the CT scan were identified and drained. Two fecaliths were found and removed from the posterior pelvic abscess, and an intraoperative rectal examination was performed to assist in emptying the abscess. The patient was discharged several days later in stable condition, afebrile and with normal WBC.


Discussion
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Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
Appendectomy remains the standard treatment for acute appendicitis. A laparoscopic approach has become increasingly common in recent years because it offers several potential advantages over the traditional open approach. Prospective studies have shown that laparoscopic appendectomy patients have less pain, faster recovery time after surgery, better cosmetic results, and a somewhat lower rate of wound infection. The adoption of laparoscopic appendectomy is not yet universal [1, 5], although laparoscopic procedures are now generally used for cholecystectomy. Some controversy continues about the appropriateness of laparoscopic appendectomy in certain situations, especially in perforated appendicitis [1].

Our patient's complication—dropped appendicoliths associated with abscess formation—can be compared with the similar complication associated with gallstones dropped during a cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis associated with intraabdominal abscess. The laparoscopic approach for cholecystectomy carries a small but increased risk of postoperative infection caused by dropped gallstones. The infection may present after some delay, in some instances up to several years after surgery [4, 6], because bacteria may be chronically harbored in gallstones [3]. The incidence of gallbladder perforation has been estimated at 15–30% during laparoscopic cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis [6]. Perforation is particularly likely to lead to gallstones being dropped into the peritoneal cavity during surgery, and retrieving them can be difficult. It is estimated that gallstones are dropped during as many as 10% of laparoscopic cholecystectomies. An abscess may ultimately occur in 0.6% of all laparoscopic cholecystectomy patients [3], although this percentage is difficult to verify. It is reasonable to assume that most, if not all, dropped appendicoliths are also potentially infectious [6].

Cross-sectional imaging techniques can show the presence of gallstones or fragments of stones in an abscess in a patient who has undergone prior cholecystectomy [4]. Abscesses related to dropped gallstones are generally found in the subhepatic space, but they may occur anywhere in the abdomen and even in the thorax as a result of fistulization of the stone [3, 4]. The identification on CT of a calcification in an abdominal or pelvic fluid collection in a patient with a history of appendectomy should also be diagnostic of such abscesses [6, 7].

When laparoscopic appendectomy becomes a more common procedure, the complications related to it will probably become more common also. To our knowledge, only 10 cases have been reported of dropped appendicoliths that caused abscesses after open appendectomy [5, 6]. Only three cases involved laparoscopic appendectomy. Two of those were reported in the surgical literature [68]. In two patients, a contained perforation of the appendix was initially identified at surgery; as with our patient, in neither case did the surgeon realize that an appendicolith had been dropped [6, 7]. In both patients, CT scans showed a subhepatic abscess that contained a calcification. Initial percutaneous abscess drainage failed in both patients, and both required surgical removal of the remaining abscess and the associated appendicolith (by open surgery in one and laparoscopic surgery in the other) [6, 7].

Dropped stones from laparoscopic appendectomy are rare, but the radiologist and surgeon should consider them as a potential source of an intraabdominal abscess [7]. Because the latency time to develop an abscess from dropped gallstones is variable, 2–3 years or longer, and because these abscesses can occur in locations remote from the surgical site [7], it is possible that a similar scenario might occur with a dropped appendicolith, although our patient developed an abscess rather quickly, approximately 2 weeks after hospital discharge, and the other recently reported patients also presented within 3–6 weeks after their initial appendectomy [6, 7]. However, radiologists should consider dropped appendicoliths a theoretical possibility even in patients in whom the surgical history is remote, because misdiagnosing this type of abscess as a simple abscess or even as a necrotic or mucin-producing tumor may delay appropriate treatment [3, 4]. As is the case with dropped gallstone–related abscess, the nidus of infection—the appendicolith—must be removed as soon as identified to prevent recurrence [37]. Typically, this removal would be effected at repeated surgery, as in our patient, via a laparoscopic approach. A single case of percutaneous removal of a dropped appendicolith was recently reported [8], similar to the report of percutaneous removal of dropped gallstones and drainage of the associated abscess [6].

In conclusion, we alert the radiologic community that just as abscesses may develop after gallstones are dropped during laparoscopic cholecystectomy, a similar scenario, albeit rare, can also occur after laparoscopic appendectomy. When an appendix is discovered to be gangrenous at surgery, it should be manipulated gently to avoid dropping any appendicoliths, and an attempt should be made to retrieve any appendicoliths that spill [6]. Radiologists should also communicate to the surgeon the presence of any appendicoliths identified on CT scans obtained in patients with suspected appendicitis. Our patient's appendix might have been perforated before surgery, so it is possible that he could have developed abscesses in any event. Prospective identification of the appendicoliths on the postoperative CT would have altered patient treatment because instead of performing percutaneous abscess drainage after the first surgery, we performed a second laparoscopic surgery.


References
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 

  1. Hardin DM Jr. Acute appendicitis: review and update. Am Fam Physician 1999;60:2027 –2034[Medline]
  2. Fischer CP, Castaneda A, Moore F. Laparoscopic appendectomy: indications and controversies. Semin Laparosc Surg2002; 9:32 –39[Medline]
  3. Horton M, Florence MG. Unusual abscess patterns following dropped gallstones during laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Am J Surg 1998;175:375 –379[Medline]
  4. Morrin MM, Kruskal JB, Hochman MG, Saldinger PF, Kane RA. Radiologic features of complications arising from dropped gallstones in laparoscopic cholecystectomy patients. AJR2000; 174:1441 –1445[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Mulder M. Retained fecalith as late complication of appendectomy. JAMA 1973;225:639
  6. Strathern DW, Jones BT. Retained fecalith after laparoscopic appendectomy. Surg Endosc1999; 13:287 –289[Medline]
  7. Smith AG, Ripepi A, Stahlfeld KR. Retained fecalith: laparoscopic removal. Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech2002; 12:441 –442[Medline]
  8. O'Shea SJ, Martin DF. Percutaneous removal of retained calculi from the abdomen. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol2003; 26:81 –84[Medline]

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Am. J. Roentgenol.Home page
A. K. Singh, P. F. Hahn, D. Gervais, G. Vijayraghavan, and P. R. Mueller
Dropped Appendicolith: CT Findings and Implications for Management
Am. J. Roentgenol., March 1, 2008; 190(3): 707 - 711.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


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