Appendiceal involvement in ulcerative colitis.

  • 1 November 1992
    • journal article
    • Vol. 5  (6) , 607-10
Abstract
Little information has been published regarding appendiceal changes in ulcerative colitis of any extent. An early study has shown the appendix to be involved in over 50% of all cases of ulcerative colitis for which a proctocolectomy was performed, but the extent of the colitis was not always defined. While some investigators have found appendiceal involvement only in continuity with adjacent involved cecum, others believed it may occur as a skip lesion. In this study, the colons and nonobliterated appendices of 87 patients who underwent total proctocolectomy for ulcerative pancolitis were examined to determine the frequency of appendiceal involvement and to determine the frequency with which such involvement truly occurs as a skip lesion. All 87 cases had ulcerative pancolitis, and 66 (62%) had colitic changes in the appendix. In the remaining 21 cases, there was no appendiceal inflammation. In all cases in which the appendix was involved, the cecum was also involved. Cecal activity or lack of activity correlated with appendiceal activity in 52 of the 87 cases (60%). Of the 35 cases in which there was some discrepancy in disease activity between the appendix and cecum, nine had more active disease in the appendix, and 26 had greater activity in the cecum, but in none of the cases where the cecum was normal or near normal was the appendix more severely involved. These data suggest that appendiceal involvement in resected ulcerative pancolitis always occurs in continuity with adjacent involved cecum, although there may be differences in disease activity between the two sites.

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