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Section Medicine

Features of The Disease Management in the Appendical Infiltrate

Vol. 11 No. 1 (2026): June :

Ismailov F.M. (1), Dolim K.S (2), Askarov T.A (3)

(1) Tashkent State Medical University, Uzbekistan
(2) Tashkent State Medical University, Uzbekistan
(3) Tashkent State Medical University, Uzbekistan
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Abstract:

General Background: Acute appendicitis represents the most prevalent acute abdominal pathology requiring surgical intervention. Specific Background: Appendicular infiltrate, occurring in 1-10% of acute appendicitis cases, poses diagnostic challenges that frequently result in inappropriate treatment selection and unjustified surgical procedures. Knowledge Gap: Despite its clinical significance, standardized diagnostic criteria and management protocols for appendicular infiltrate remain inadequately defined, particularly regarding intraoperative recognition and intervention decisions. Aims: This study analyzed diagnostic approaches and treatment outcomes in patients presenting with appendicular infiltrate to establish evidence-based management protocols. Results: Among 3,567 patients treated for acute appendicitis between 2020-2024, appendicular infiltrate was identified in 38 cases (1.1%). Delayed presentation constituted the primary etiological factor (75%), while atypical appendiceal positioning complicated diagnosis in 7.9% of cases. Conservative management achieved successful resolution in 78.9% of patients, whereas 21.1% required surgical intervention due to abscess formation. Intraoperative identification of infiltrate in six patients necessitated procedure termination with drainage placement; one attempted appendectomy resulted in postoperative complications. Novelty: This investigation establishes that immediate cessation of surgery upon intraoperative infiltrate recognition minimizes complications. Implications: These findings emphasize prioritizing conservative management and avoiding appendectomy when infiltrate is encountered operatively.
Highlight :












  • Late patient presentation is the primary factor in the development of appendicular infiltrate.




  • Diagnostic difficulties, including atypical appendix location, often lead to tactical errors.




  • Conservative management is effective in most cases, while unjustified appendectomy increases postoperative complications.




Keywords : Acute Appendicitis, Appendicular Infiltrate, Delayed Diagnosis, Conservative Treatment, Surgical Tactics









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