Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.)

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Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.) Indexed in Scopus since 2022
CiteScore 1.0
Indexed since 2022
First decision 7 Days
Submission to acceptance 45 Days
Acceptance to publication 14 Days
Acceptance rate 8%

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Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.) Open directory record
Original full research article

Open appendectomy in acute appendicitis in a Palestinian government hospital: a retro-spective analysis of histopathological findings, hospital stay, outcomes and postoperative complications

Published
2020-06-20
Pages
15 - 26
Full text

Keywords

  • Hospital stay
  • Acute appendicitis
  • Patient outcomes
  • Open appendectomy
  • Postoperative complications.

Abstract

Globally, acute appendicitis is the most commonly performed surgical emergency of the abdomen. The present study was conducted to report on the duration of stay at hospitals after open appendectomy, histopathological abnormalities, and postoperative complications among patients who undergo open appendectomy in Palestinian surgical practice. The study was conducted using a retrospective observational design in which patient records (n = 100) were identified, sampled, and included in the analysis. The study was conducted at one of the main hospitals in Hebron District in the West Bank of Palestine. Of the patients included, 52% were less than 18 years old, 59% were male in gender, 64% were discharged in 2 or less days, 80% had histopathological abnormalities detected, 97% had their appendices removed, and the vast majority (94%) did not have any postoperative complications. Of the 80 patients in which their specimens had histopathological abnormalities, phlegmonous appendicitis was prevalent in 49 patients (61.3% of the cases). Postoperative complications were documented in 6% of patients. Postoperative hospital stay was significantly longer for patients who had abnormal histopathology (p value < 0.05), abdominal drainage (p value < 0.01), and those with postoperative complications (p value < 0.01). Patients who were less than 18 years old had significantly higher number of specimens with no histopathological abnormalities (Fish-er’s exact test = 8.74, p value < 0.05). Male patients had significantly higher number of phlegmonous appendicitis cases compared to female patients (Fisher’s exact test = 13.0, p value < 0.05). Patients who had phlegmonous appendicitis tended to stay longer than patients who had other histopathological abnormalities (Fisher’s exact test = 18.7, p value < 0.01). In conclusion, open appendectomies are still commonly performed in the Palestinian surgical practice with comparatively low incidence of postoperative complications. Future studies should be directed at reducing postoperative complications, improving patient outcomes, and reducing hospital stay.

Article history

Received
2020-06-12
Accepted
2020-06-20
بحث أصيل كامل

Open appendectomy in acute appendicitis in a Palestinian government hospital: a retro-spective analysis of histopathological findings, hospital stay, outcomes and postoperative complications

Published
2020-06-20
الصفحات
15 - 26
البحث كاملا

الكلمات الإفتتاحية

  • Hospital stay
  • Acute appendicitis
  • Patient outcomes
  • Open appendectomy
  • Postoperative complications.

الملخص

Globally, acute appendicitis is the most commonly performed surgical emergency of the abdomen. The present study was conducted to report on the duration of stay at hospitals after open appendectomy, histopathological abnormalities, and postoperative complications among patients who undergo open appendectomy in Palestinian surgical practice. The study was conducted using a retrospective observational design in which patient records (n = 100) were identified, sampled, and included in the analysis. The study was conducted at one of the main hospitals in Hebron District in the West Bank of Palestine. Of the patients included, 52% were less than 18 years old, 59% were male in gender, 64% were discharged in 2 or less days, 80% had histopathological abnormalities detected, 97% had their appendices removed, and the vast majority (94%) did not have any postoperative complications. Of the 80 patients in which their specimens had histopathological abnormalities, phlegmonous appendicitis was prevalent in 49 patients (61.3% of the cases). Postoperative complications were documented in 6% of patients. Postoperative hospital stay was significantly longer for patients who had abnormal histopathology (p value < 0.05), abdominal drainage (p value < 0.01), and those with postoperative complications (p value < 0.01). Patients who were less than 18 years old had significantly higher number of specimens with no histopathological abnormalities (Fish-er’s exact test = 8.74, p value < 0.05). Male patients had significantly higher number of phlegmonous appendicitis cases compared to female patients (Fisher’s exact test = 13.0, p value < 0.05). Patients who had phlegmonous appendicitis tended to stay longer than patients who had other histopathological abnormalities (Fisher’s exact test = 18.7, p value < 0.01). In conclusion, open appendectomies are still commonly performed in the Palestinian surgical practice with comparatively low incidence of postoperative complications. Future studies should be directed at reducing postoperative complications, improving patient outcomes, and reducing hospital stay.

Article history

تاريخ التسليم
2020-06-12
تاريخ القبول
2020-06-20