Publication | Closed Access
Relative Value of Clinical, Laboratory and Imaging Tools in Diagnosing Pediatric Acute Appendicitis
24
Citations
0
References
2011
Year
The results of laboratory tests (WBC, neutrophils) and imaging (US) contributed far more than clinical signs and symptoms (pain duration, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and peritoneal signs at first physical examination) to the correct diagnosis of AA in children. When these 3 parameters were positive, the probability of a false positive (normal appendix) was only 1%. The contribution of US was particularly high as it was used primarily in patients in whom the diagnosis was in doubt and its results matched the final diagnosis better than diagnoses based on clinical signs and symptoms alone. It provides the additional benefit of no radiation exposure.