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Acute appendicitis: is there a relation between the evolution phase, age and hospital length of stay?

BACKGROUND: Acute appendicitis is a very common disease and elderly people appears to carry the worst prognostic outcome. The objective of this paper is to identify a possible relation between the evolutive phase of the appendicitis, age of the patient and hospital length of stay. METHODS: A total of 272 patients submitted to appendectomy were retrospectively evaluated regarding the evolutive phase of appendicitis, age of the patient and of hospital length of stay. The evolution of the inflammatory process was classified by the hystopathologic exam in four types: catarrhal, phlegmonous, suppurative and gangrenous. RESULTS: Males were 193 (70%) and the median age of all patients was 29 years. The mean hospital length of stay was 4.3 days. The incidence of the different evolution phases was: 88 cases (32.3%) for catarrhal, 79 (29%) for phlegmonous form, 70 (25.7%) for suppurative and 35 (12.8%) gangrenous. The analysis of the mean age and mean lenght of stay in the hospital was: 27.9 years and 3.7 days for the catarrhal type, 28.4 years and 3.9 days for phlegmonous type, 30.1 years and 5 days for the supurative type and 35 years and 5.2 days for the gangrenous type. When they were grouped, the mean age and length of stay were: 28.1 years and 3.8 for the group catarrhal + phlegmonous and 30.7 years and 5 days for the supurative + gangrenous group. There was statistical significance between the evolution phase of the appendicitis and the hospital length of stay (p=0.01) and between age and evolution of the appendicitis (p=0.01). CONCLUSION: Patients with advanced evolutive phases of appendicitis trends to stay longer in hospital, tends particularly in older patients.

Appendicitis; Age; Hospital stay


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