The myth of the fecalith

The myth of the fecalith

The Myth of the Fecalith RICHARD L. MAENZA, MD LINDA SMITH, MD ALLAN B. WOLFSON, MD A radiographically demonstrated fecalith is widely considered a vi...

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The Myth of the Fecalith RICHARD L. MAENZA, MD LINDA SMITH, MD ALLAN B. WOLFSON, MD A radiographically demonstrated fecalith is widely considered a virtually pathognomonic sign of acute appendicitis. This case report describes a patient with a clinical presentation suggestive of appendicitis and a well-defined right lower quadrant fecalith who was found to have a normal appendix at surgery. This case calls into question the venerable dogma surrounding the fecalith and highlights the necessity for the physician to continue to rely on clinical judgment in making the diagnosis of appendicitis. (Am J Emerg Med 1996;14:394-397. Copyright © 1996 by W.B. Saunders Company) The emergency department (ED) evaluation of suspected appendicitis requires the clinician to integrate and interpret clinical, laboratory, and radiographic data. The diagnostic accuracy of clinical findings and ancillary studies, however, has been reported to be as low as 25%, and generally no greater than 85%. 1-1° The presence of a calcified, lamellated, appendiceal mass (termed a fecalith or appendicolith) (Figure 1) is widely identified as a virtually pathognomonic sign of acute appendicitis. 11-13 We recently cared for a patient with suspected appendicitis in whom a fecalith was found on abdominal radiography.

tenderness, involuntary guarding, or organomegaly. The rectal examination yielded stool that was trace-positive for blood but otherwise unremarkable. An electrocardiogram and chest radiograph were unchanged from previous studies. An abdominal radiograph showed no free air and a gas pattern consistent with small bowel ileus. A 0.75-cm lamellated, calcified density was seen in the right lower quadrant. Laboratory studies showed normal electrolyte, blood urea nitrogen, and creatinine levels. The white blood cell count was 11,000, with 79% neutrophils, 6% lyphocytes, and 4% band forms. The hematocrit was 34% and the platelet count 335,000. Liver function test results and amylase level were normal. A fecal smear showed no leukocytes. The urinalysis was negative except for trace blood and protein by dipstick. The patient was admitted to the hospital and observed. The abdominal pain intensified over the next 12 hours, and a repeat complete blood count showed an increase in the white blood cell count to 15,800, with 79% neutrophils and 10% band forms. The patient was taken to the operating room for appendectomy. At surgery a massively distended cecum (19 cm in diameter) and multiple small bowel adhesions were discovered. The was no pus or intestinal contents within the peritoneal cavity. The appendix was grossly normal, and this was confirmed on pathological and histological examination. A calcified fecalith was found in the lumen of the appendix.

CASE REPORT A 66-year-old man presented to the ED with a 4-day history of worsening right lower quadrant abdominal pain, nausea, anorexia, diarrhea, and a subjective feeling of fever. During this time he also had upper respiratory symptoms consisting of a mild cough and coryza. His medical history was significant for adult-onset diabetes mellitus, coronary artery disease, myocardial infarction, and ventricular arrhythmia. He had previously undergone a triple-vessel coronary artery bypass graft, a right lower lobectomy for lung cancer, and repair of a suprarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm. Physical examination revealed a robust man who preferred to lie very still. The vital signs were as follows: temperature, 36.9°C; blood pressure, 130/80 mm Hg; pulse, 88 beats/rain; and respirations, 18 breaths/min and unlabored. Skin, head, and neck examination results were within normal limits. Cardiac examination revealed a normal S i, a widely split $2, and no murmurs, rubs, or gallops. The lungs were clear to auscultation bilaterally. On abdominal examination there was right lower quadrant fullness, with tenderness to palpation. Palpation of the left lower quadrant produced pain in the right lower quadrant. Positive right-sided obturator and psoas signs were noted. There was no rebound

DISCUSSION A radiopaque fecalith in the right lower quadrant has been identified as a virtually pathonogmonic sign of early acute appendicitis by respected surgical, medical, and pediatric textbooks. 1H4 None of these texts, however, cite published evidence for these statements. In the case presented here, the finding of a normal appendix at surgery despite the presence of a fecalith calls this venerable dogma into question. The association between the presence of a radiographically identified fecalith and appendicitis is well documented. Fecaliths have been identified by plain radiography, 6,15-19 ultrasound, 16,2°-25 and computed tomography (CT)] 5,26 and at laparotomy. 27 Associated appendicitis in these reports was demonstrated by surgical or histological examination. However, the imaging studies were performed because o f clinically suspected intra-abdominal pathology, which may have introduced a strong selection bias.

Plain Film Radiography From the University of Pittsburgh Affiliated Residency in Emergency Medicine and The Center for Emergency Medicine of Western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh. Manuscript received June 6, 1995, accepted June 6, 1995. Address reprint requests to Dr Wolfson, Center for Emergency Medicine, 230 McKee Place, Suite 500, Pittsburgh, PA 15213. Key Words:Appendicitis, abdominal pain, abdominal radiography. Copyright © 1996 by W.B. Saunders Company 0735-6757/96/1404-001555.00/0 394

A limited number o f studies from the 1940s and 1960s identified fecaliths of the appendix in normal abdomens as well as in patients with an acute abdomen. 2s'3° These articles reported that about 13% of patients with acute appendicitis at surgery had fecaliths visible on abdominal X-rays, compared to 2% to 4% of normal controls. More recent literature reports a significant number of patients in whom a radiographically identifiable fecalith was

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associated with appendicitis and is therefore a pathonogmonic sign of this disease.

CT Scanning In a study by Malone et a126 utilizing unenhanced CT in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis, 211 patients with right lower quadrant abdominal pain underwent CT without oral or intravenous contrast. A fight lower quadrant calcification was noted in 40 of the 211 patients. However, at the time of surgery only 29 of the 40 (73%) had pathologically proven appendicitis. The authors concluded that calcification in the fight lower quadrant must be associated with inflammation for the diagnosis of appendicitis to be made. This finding concurs with those of Balthazar et al, 1~ who examined 38 patients with histologically proven appendicitis who had undergone CT scanning. Nine patients had an appendicolith identified on CT, but all were accompanied by focal signs of inflammation or abscess. These authors caution that appendicoliths are seen in asymptomatic individuals on CT scan and that in the absence of associated inflammatory changes they have no immediate clinical implications. Of interest is that all 38 of these patients also had plain abdominal radiographs taken and that a calcified appendieolith was identified in only 5 cases with this modality. FIGURE 1. Abdominal radiograph showing typical fecalith (arrow).

present and, yet, acute appendicitis was absent. In the largest series, 6 570 of 1,000 patients undergoing surgery for suspected appendicitis had plain films obtained. A fecalith was identified in 14 of these 570 patients; of these, 13 had histologically proven appendicitis. Teicher et a117investigated the usefulness of the plain film in developing a scoring system for the diagnosis of acute appendicitis. In this case-control study, two groups of patients were examined: 100 patients with proven appendicitis and 100 patients with surgically proven normal appendices. A fecalith was found in 10.5% of patients with appendicitis versus 3.3% of those with a normal appendix. Another study 18 evaluated the utility of plain films in pediatric patients presenting to the ED with abdominal pain. A "diagnostic" radiograph was defined as one that was "pathonogmonic" for acute appendicitis: appendicolith with ileus. Of 18 patients, 2 had misleading "diagnostic" films that demonstrated an appendicolith and ileus, but these 2 patients did not have appendicitis at surgery. Conversely, of the 16 patients who proved to have acute appendicitis, only 2 had "diagnostic" films. Several other studies have also noted the presence of a fecalith on plain radiography in the absence of histologically or surgically proven appendicitis. 6,15-19 These studies and others support the correlation between appendicitis and the presence of a fecalith on abdominal radiography, but each of them also mentions patients who had a fecalith but did not have appendicitis. The identification of a fecalith in these patients, and others such as the one reported here, refutes the widely held notion that a detectable fecalith is invariably

Laparotomy Burkitt 27reported the incidence of fecalith in two separate patient populations. One group of patients underwent laparotomy for any of a number of indications (including trauma). In these 73 patients, 44 incidental fecaliths were found (60%) in patients who were not suspected of having acute appendicitis. The second patient population underwent surgery for suspected appendicitis. Here 33 of 63 patients (52%) had a fecalith palpated at the time of surgery. The incidental finding of fecaliths was remarkably high when compared to the number of fecaliths found in patients with suspected appendicitis. This study did not note whether the appendicoliths were identifiable on plain radiography or with other imaging modalities.

Ultrasonography In the past 5 years, ultrasound has been increasingly utilized as an aid in the diagnosis of appendicitis. 3~-3sAmong the ultrasonographic signs of appendiceal inflammation or abscess are a noncompressible enlarged appendix, inflammation of periappendiceal fat, and local fluid collection or mass. Fecaliths are also visualized by ultrasound, one article reporting that 50% of these fecaliths were not detected on abdominal plain films. 3I The incidence of fecalith detectable by ultrasound in patients with surgically confirmed appendicitis is reported to be 9.7% to 33.7%. 31,35 Although the presence of a fecalith on ultrasound examination was considered by all investigators to support the diagnosis of appendicitis, in no case was it the sole evidence for appendicitis. In other words, in these studies the ultrasonographic diagnosis of appendicitis was based on signs of

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appendiceal inflammation or infection, independent of the presence of a fecalith.

Pathophysiology One reason the fecalith has been widely considered a specific indicator of appendicitis 11,12,36 may be that obstruction of the appendiceal lumen is believed to play a central pathophysiologic role in the development of acute appendicitis. 11,1z37Classically, u,12,38,39 appendicitis has been thought to begin with luminal obstruction of the appendix by a fecalith, local inflammation, lymphoid hyperplasia, foreign body, or tumor, leading to accumulation of secreted mucus behind the obstruction. Bacteria within the static mucus proliferate, increasing intraluminal pressure and leading to ischemia and perforation of the appendix. The radiographically visualized fecalith is held to represent objective evidence of appendiceal luminal obstruction and, therefore, appendicitis. Nevertheless, the mere presence of a fecalith within the appendix is not necessarily indicative of obstruction. A growing body of evidence suggests that luminal obstruction is not a necessary factor in the production of appendicitis and, indeed, that the majority of cases of appendicitis occur without any evidence of obstruction of the appendiceal lumen. Arnbjorusson and Bengmark4° measured intralumihal pressure in the appendices of 33 patients undergoing appendectomy for suspected appendicitis. A fine needle was inserted into the appendix at surgery, and measurements were made of the hydrostatic pressure required to inject saline into the lumen. Of 21 patients with phlegmonous appendicitis at operation, only 2 were found to have luminal obstruction as indicated by an increased intraluminal pressure. In contrast, all 6 cases of gangrenous appendicitis had an elevated intraluminal pressure, indicating obstruction. The authors concluded that obstruction is not a necessary factor in the causation of acute appendicitis, but that it may develop as a result of the inflammatory process. Recently, some authors have attempted to identify ultrasonographic findings that could distinguish perforated from nonperforated appendicitis. 33,34Patients with a fecalith were found to be no more likely to have perforation than those without a fecalith. This observation supports the notion that either fecaliths do not obstruct the appendiceal lumen or that luminal obstruction is not important in the progression of appendicitis. Similarly, based on the study of 71,000 appendices over a period of 40 years as a pathologist, Collins 41 reported that 65% of cases of appendicitis were not associated with appendiceal obstruction. Other investigators have echoed the conclusion that obstruction is not a necessary part of the pathogenesis of acute appendicitis. ~5,4~

CONCLUSIONS The case reported here highlights the fact that the presence of a fecalith on plain film, ultrasound, or CT scan cannot in itself be considered pathonogmonic of appendicitis. Physicians should continue to rely on their clinical judgment in making the diagnosis of appendicitis, even in the presence of a fecalith.

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