The Treatment of Complicated Appendicitis in Children

Abstract
• From 1976 to 1985, 233 consecutive children were treated for appendicitis by a standardized protocol. Forty-nine percent of these cases were complicated: 11% by gangrene, 33% by perforation, and 4% by perforations with well-developed abscesses. Treatment of gangrenous and perforated appendicitis consisted of administration of ampicillin sodium, gentamicin sulfate, and clindamycin phosphate; appendectomy; and saline peritoneal irrigation. Transperitoneal drainage was not used. Skin and subcutaneous tissues were left open for delayed primary wound closure. Perforations with well-developed abscesses were treated with triple antibiotic therapy and interval appendectomy. The only infectious complication was one intra-abdominal abscess. There were no wound infections or deaths. The rate of infectious complications was 0.9%, and the overall morbidity was 4.4%. This standardized treatment of complicated appendicitis in children prevents wound infection and significantly decreases the incidence of intra-abdominal abscess formation and mortality. (Arch Surg 1987;122:424-427)