Gilmore O J, Browett J P, Griffin P H, Ross I K, Brodribb A J, Cooke T J, Higgs M J, Williamson R C
Lancet. 1975 Sep 6;2(7932):421-4. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(75)90841-7.
A prospective study of 444 consecutive patients diagnosed as having acute appendicitis was carried out in a district general hospital. The appendix was acutely inflamed, gangrenous, or perforated in 346 patients. Diagnostic error, 22% overall, was twice as common in females as in males. Organisms were isolated from the outer appendix wall in 117 patients, isolation increasing with the severity of inflammation. 12% of children under 11 had mesentric adenitis, 10% of all females had gynaecological lesions, and 14% of patients over 50 had acute diverticulitis. In only 6% of patients was no abnormality found at operation, and in every case the disorder was dealt with through the gridiron incision.