A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

A chance of misdiagnosis between acute appendicitis and renal colic




AuthorsPaajanen H, Tainio H, Laato M

PublisherSCANDINAVIAN UNIVERSITY PRESS

Publication year1996

Journal:Scandinavian Journal of Urology and Nephrology

Journal name in sourceSCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF UROLOGY AND NEPHROLOGY

Journal acronymSCAND J UROL NEPHROL

Volume30

Issue5

First page 363

Last page366

Number of pages4

ISSN0036-5599

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3109/00365599609181311


Abstract

The symptoms of right-sided renal colic mimic sometimes acute appendicitis. A prospective comparative study of 188 patients with ureteral stone and 188 patients with acute appendicitis was performed to evaluate the features of differential diagnosis. Appendicitis caused more often nausea (81 vs 11%), fever and localized pain in the McBurney (97 vs 59%) than renal colic. The patients with ureteral stone had tenderness in 16% in the right lower quadrant. The mean values of C-reactive protein (41 mg/l) and blood leukocytes (14 x 10(9)/l) were elevated in appendicitis, but not in renal colic (14 mg/l and 10 x 10(9)/l). Urinanalysis revealed red cells in 92% of ureteral stones compared with 26% in appendicitis. Only one of 188 patients with apppendicitis was first misdiagnosed to have renal colic. A mistake of appendicitis for ureteral stone is clinically rare occurring only once or twice per year in the hospital where 700-800 emergency appendectomies are annually performed.




Last updated on 2025-13-10 at 12:32